(after stating the facts as above). The rights of the parties here are to be measured entirely by the terms of a written contract, sued upon by appellee and admitted to have been executed by appellants. According to the terms of the contract, appellee was to manufacture the lumber from his own logs and to stack and pile it on his own millyard so that it could seasonably dry out before delivery to appellants at their planer, about six miles distant from the mill. The lumber was not to be delivered io appellants, or to be accepted by them after being cut, until it was dried out by the methods agreed upon. The method and mode to be used by appellee in drying out the lumber after taking it from the saw were stipulated to be as follows: “Air-dried lumber to be stacked with strips not to exceed 4. inches in width; there must be a distance of 5 feet between each stack of lumber, and the foundation of each stack must be built so as to have an inch drop per foot so as to thoroughly drain itself. The lumber must be stacked so as to give a five-inch flue. * * * Each length to be piled separately by itself.” It was conclusively shown that it takes1 about 60 days for lumber taken fresh cut and green from the saw to dry out, and that by following the stipulated way of drying it a better class of lumber for use and a more valuable grade in the market was obtained. As the burden was on appellee to show a compliance with these terms of contract incumbent on him to perform, the findings of the jury in respect thereto determine the appeal.
By the undisputed evidence it is shown as a fact that on April 3, 1909, the admitted time appellants by letter gave notice to ap-pellee to discontinue any more deliveries of lumber to the planer, appellee had on his millyard 800,000 feet of lumber. After that date, and before suit, Jordan, the manager of the lumber company, went down to the millyard, and he and McKee, who was in charge of the mill for appellee, looked over the stacking and piling, and appellants accepted only 72,000 feet of the same as being in accordance with the terms of the contract. As appellee offered no evidence at variance with this, it must be concluded as a fact that the balance of the lumber was not stacked and piled as stipulated it should be done, and that the verdict of the jury had reference to the 72,000 feet, and no more, as being within the terms of contract. As the payment by the lumber company to ap-pellee for the lumber delivered and accepted at the planer and for the 72,000 feet accepted at the millyard legally operated to relieve the lumber company of any liability for such lumber, it would appear in this record that the controversy between the parties must be solely in reference to the balance of the lumber on hand at the millyard refused to be taken by appellants. There is no finding by the jury of a waiver of performance of the stipulations by appellants, and a finding to that effect is not warranted by 'the evidence. It is an undisputed fact, and true, that appellants never saw the lumber at the millyard, nor had information of the manner in which appellee was stacking and piling it at the mill, at any time before the date of April 3, 1909, and that after seeing it and knowing how it was stacked and piled they refused to accept any but,72,000 feet of the 800,000 feet as being within the terms of contract.
, The judgment of the district court must be reversed, and judgment here rendered on the verdict of the jury that appellee take nothing by the suit, and that appellants recover all costs of the court below and of this court
