7 Fla. 318 | Fla. | 1857
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was an action of indebitatus assumpsit, brought by the plaintiffs against the defendants, for the recovery of the price and value of a raft containing eleven hundred and two round saw logs, estimated at 802,232 feet, bargained and sold, as alleged by plaintiffs,' to defendants. The declaration contained only the common counts, there being no count upon a special contract designating the quality of the timber and fixing the price per thousand to be paid for the same.
The pleas were the general issue and a set-off.
There was a verdict and judgment for the plaintiffs below, to. which the defendants excepted and moved for a new trial. This motion was refused and the defendants bring their appeal before this Court.
Although several errors have been assigned, we see but three points demanding our attention, to-wit:
1. Whether a recovery can be had upon the common counts, when a special contract has been proved and not executed or rescinded.
2. Whether improper testimony was admitted upon the trial; and lastly,
3. Whether the verdict of the jury was sustained by the testimony. ,
The case was elaborately and. ably argued, and the law on the subject brought fully before the Court.
The principle of law involved in the first proposition is of familiar occurrence — is found in all the elementary books^ and admits of no question. The only difficulty here consists in its application to the case under review. ' The ques
“ If you find from the evidence that these logs were purchased under a special contract, or that there was a special agreement that plaintiff's were to deliver to the defendants, at their mill, logs of a particular size, description and quality, for a certain stipulated price, then plaintiff's cannot recover, there being no spiecial count in the declaration — unless you find the contract has been fully performed by the plaintiffs, or rescinded, abandoned or extinct by some act of the defendants.”
The legal proposition contained in this charge was not ■disputed in the argument, nor do we perceive any reason, to question its soundness. The law, therefore, having been correctly laid down to the jury, it remains only to inquire whether, from the testimony, they were ¡^ermited to ignore the existence of such special contract. And here it will be seen it is not a question of conflicting testimony, or of the weight of testimony to support the verdict, but rather of the sufficiency of the unrebutted evidence to establish a contrary conclusion. Viewed in this aspect,it presented to the Court below, upon the motion for a new trial, the question of the weight and conclusiveness of testimony in its most delicate form. The Court was moved to adjudge that the jury should have believed that which they u]3on their oaths declared they did not believe. The exercise of such power would certainly prove a very high and danger, ous prerogative in the Court, and we think the Circuit Judge very wisely declined it. Nevertheless, we are free to admit that the testimony in this case, of Mr. J. M. Daniel, goes far, in our mind, to establish the special contract contended for, though its execution or recision is more doubtful, but the finding of the jury is a legal resolution of all doubt in the matter, and must, for all present purposes, be conclusive on the subject.
3. It appears from the testimony that there were two methods of measuring round logs, both of which are laid down in Preston’s Tables. By one of these ¿methods, the solid cubic contents of the log is obtained, while by the other, the quantity which they will make when manufactured at a saw mill into boards is ascertained. Mr. John Smith, a sworn inspector and surveyor of lumber, was called by the plaintiffs to survey the raft of logs in question, and he testifies substantially the distinction between the former, called the “cubic rule,” and the latter called the “saw log rule,” the former giving a larger quantity than the latter. Mr. J. M. Daniel, another of the plain
On this subject the Court charged the jury as follows, to-wit: “If you find from the evidence that at the time of the delivery of these logs, Preston’s board measure rule —that is, the 'saw log rule — was the rule by which the contents of round logs was ascertained and determined between vendors and purchasers, then you are to presume that these logs were purchased by this rule; for if they were not to have been measured by this rule, it is incumbent upon the plaintiffs to show that defendants agreed to receive them by some other rule of measurement.”
This instruction has not been complained of by the counsel on either side, nor do we see any objection to it. It should therefore have been a guide to the jury in making up their verdict. What have they done? They have based their verdict upon Smith’s survey and measurement, which he testifies was made by the “ cubic rule,” thereby ignoring the existence of the “board measure” or “saw log rule,” and the question is, whether such a finding is supported by the testimony.
However disinclined we are to invade the proper province of a jury in estimating the force and effect of testimony, this is a case of too glaring a departure from all legal principle for the verdict to be permitted to stand-There was no testimony whatever to support the idea that the “cubic rule” was the prevailing and customary mode of measurement adopted in the locality of this' transaction between dealers in saw logs. On the contrary, Mr. Smith himself testifies, that he had adopted the “saw log rule” in his surveys previous to this transaction, with a few
Hpon the presumption then that the cubic rule was not the prevailing and customary rule, it is apparent that the jury, in basing their verdict upon Smith’s survey made by that rule, charged the defendants with this excess. The testimony of all the other witnesses establish fully that the “saw log rule ” was the recognized rule. This verdict then is clearly unsupported by the evidence, and contrary to the charge of the Court, and it must therefore be set aside, the judgment reversed, and a new trial granted.