65 W. Va. 321 | W. Va. | 1909
In an action of assmnpsit, on the common counts and a special count, with bill of particulars, the plaintiffs obtained a verdict and judgment against defendants for eight hundred and seventy-five dollars. In the special count a contract in writing, between plaintiffs and defendants, dated November 7, 1903, was alleged, wherebj1', in consideration of the prices stipulated to be paid them therefor, the plaintiffs contracted with defendants to pile, peel, properly cure and load on ears, according to railroad regulations, all the merchantable bark from green hemlock timber standing on lands of the defendants and to be designated by
Early in the trial below plaintiffs in proof of the first item of their account endeavor to show by the witness McCracken, that in their statement rendered for the month of October, 1903, defendants had shown as the balance due them at that time $6,103.60, and that in the statement for the month of November, 1903, they had brought down this balance as $6,500.98, a difference of $397.38. When plaintiffs counsel asked the witness whether he could explain why defendants had made this difference against his firm, he answered, “I cannot.” The motion by defendants to exclude this question and answer was overruled. Immediately afterwards, however, when plaintiffs counsel asked the witness to state when he in fact began work for the defendants under the contract and why the written contract bore date of November 7, 1903, the objection by defendants counsel thereto was sustained. And thereafter, for a time at least,’ the court limited plaintiffs in their evidence to transactions subsequent to that date. Later when it began to appear that the
These rulings of the court we think were based on the erroneous theory that plaintiffs were necessarily limited -in their proof to the matters alleged in the special count. The allegations of the special count and the evidence on the trial show a contract fully executed on the part of the plaintiffs and that nothing remained to be done on the part of the defendants except to pay plaintiffs the balance, if anything, due them, and that the contract no longer remained executory. A special count therefore was unnecessary. The plaintiffs, if entitled to recover anything, were entitled to recover upon the common counts. Railroad Co. v. Lafferty, 2 W. Va. 104; Railroad Co. v. Polly, Woods & Co., 14 Grat. 445; Tunnel v. Mayo, 7 Johns. 132; all cited with approval in Bannister v. Coal & Coke Co., 63 W. Va. 502, 507. In the latter case we quote from Tunnel v. Mayo, supra, that “where the party declares on a special agreement, seeking to recover thereon, but fails altogether, he may recover on a general contract, if the case be such that, supposing there had been no special contract, he might still have recovered.” We think therefore that the rulings of the court in so limiting the evidence of the parties was erroneous, and that the action of the court below overruling defendants motion to strike out, set forth in defendants bill of exceptions number two, was right.
But whether defendants were prejudiced by the ruling of the court, shown in their bills of exceptions numbered three, four
The sixth bill of exceptions relied on relates to the testimony of plaintiff Lord, that at one time when at defendants mill he had observed the scaler emploj^ed in sealing logs make a mistake of some nine feet or more in scaling a particular log, and that not long before that this scaler had told witness that he had never known anything about scaling logs, and that witness had asked him if he was scaling the logs that were on the ways there. The court below overruled defendants motion to exclude this evidence. Defendants claim the log in question was not shown to be one that plaintiffs had cut; but plaintiffs had already offered evidence tending to show mistakes due to incompetency of scalers, and the omission on the part of defendants to scale at all some of the logs delivered by them, and the purpose of plaintiffs by this evidence was to show that defendants had incompetent men in charge of the scaling 'of logs, and by referring to the logs on. the ways, witness was evidently pointing to logs
The seventh bill of exceptions relates to the motion of the defendants, made at the close of the plaintiffs testimony, denied by the court below, to exclude certain evidence of the plaintiffs. The motion .was first applied, to the exclusion of the evidence relating to the number of feet- claimed in the logs delivered by them, defendants claiming that the tally sheets were the best evidence thereof and that plaintiffs had not offered these in evidence; second, to the evidence of the plaintiffs as to loss of bark burned, because of want of negligence, of the defendants shown in allowing the fire to escape; and third, to the evidence of plaintiffs relating to logs cut by defendants from the lands which defendants had marked out for them under their contract. This •was not a motion in terms to strike out all of plaintiffs evidence but it applied to all the evidence relating to all the items in plaintiffs account, except the item of cash, charged as not having been received; but we see no reason why the general rule of waiver, announced in Trump v. Coal Coke Co., 46 W. Va. 238, and other cases, should not apply;, for defendants, after-wards, introduced all their evidence relating to the same subject, thereby supplementing the evidence of plaintiffs.
And this brings us to the consideration of the eighth or last bill of exceptions containing the certificate of evidence and the motion of the defendants, overruled by the court below, to set aside the-verdict and grant them a new trial, the only other error relied on. On this question it is practically'conceded that the verdict and the judgment thereon, to the extent of $425.40 are sustained by the evidence. This concession is based upon the evidence'of plaintiffs that the reports and statements made by defendants to them, from time to time, of the logs, bark and pulp wood delivered, showed them entitled to $22,472.65, and that the bill of sets-off of defendants shows, and defendants admitted, they had paid plaintiffs on account only the sum of $22,047.25, leaving a balance of $425.40. But as to the residue of the verdict and judgment, namely $449.60, it is insisted there is absolutely no evidence to support them. In determining this question we must -confine ourselves to the evidence relating to the several items in the plaintiffs account filed. The
On the second item, 350,000 feet of spruce and ¡hemlock timber not accounted for, we find no appreciable evidence to support it, except only in so far as it may be covered by the sum $425.40 covered by the verdict. The only other evidence relied upon to swell the quantity of logs delivered and not accounted for is certain indefinite testimony of plaintiffs and other witnesses that incompetent scalers had been at work at the mill, and' that possibly in the absence of the regular scaler, some of the logs delivered at the railroad may not have been scaled at all, and that there were probably certain logs in the mill pond, separated from the main body of the logs delivered, that had not been scaled. But there was no evidence showing or tending to show as a matter of fact that any of the logs delivered by plaintiffs had not been scaled or incorrectly scaled. On the contrary, the testimony of the scalers and bookkeepers of the defendants is positive
The third item of the account, $500.00 for damages to roads of plaintiffs, is unsupported by any appreciable evidence. The plaintiffs have failed to give in evidence a single fact showing actual damages, and .justifying the jury in including anything therefor in their verdict. That some trees were cut by defendants for use in building their saw mill and making other necessary preparations for their lumbering operations is admitted, and there is some little evidence tending to show some little delay and• inconvenience to plaintiffs resulting therefrom; but there was nothing in the contract providing against use of the timber by defendants, or inconveniences t'o plaintiffs therefrom. Defendants were obliged to have timber to build their mill and make other necessary preparations. This fact we think must have been contemplated by the parties at the time of the- contract. The jury therefore was not justified by the evidence in including- anything in their verdict on account of this item.
The fourth item, damages to plaintiffs by taking timber nearest the dam and railroad, is an item of the same character. Plaintiffs assume that there was some covenant or a agreement implied, that defendants were not to invade for the purposes shown the territory marked out on their land for plaintiffs operations; but in this we think they are in error. The proof is that some fifteen trees near the location of the mill, were cut down and used in the construction thereof; but there is not the slightest evidence to show that any actual damages resulted to the plaintiffs therefrom. They did not cut and deliver this timber to the plaintiffs,-
The fifth or last item, tan bark burned in the woods and at the railroad by defendants negligence, .has little, if any, competent evidence to support it. Plaintiffs estimate the amount of this bark at about two car loads. The bark did not belong to them; by the terms of the contract they were entitled upon delivery to the price stipulated for peeling, piling and curing the same. That which was in the woods, though peeled and piled, had not yet been delivered, and by the terms of the contract the measurement at the tannery was to control the amount to be paid plaintiffs. The actual amount of damages, if any, sustained by plaintiffs was left uncertain.
But whether defendants are liable for such damages depends on wdrether the fire causing the loss of the bark was due to their negligence. The testimony of the plaintiff McCracken is that the fire originated, to the best of his knowledge, from a house occupied by one Smith, located some four hundred yards from defendants mill, and he says he don’t know what Smith was doing when the fire got started; he does not know whether it was Smith or some other person who was cleaning away the brush. ' He did not know what the brush was being cleared away for, but thought it might have been because the brush was piled up against the house. The plaintiff Lord says that bark was burned in the woods, and at the railroad, but he does not attempt to say by whose negligence it was burned. He does say that when cleaning up the lumber yard they would have fire during the day, that would burn all night, and that along in the night there was an unusually large fire down by the camp along the railroad where there was quite a large pile of bark that nearly burned up. He judges that there was a car load of bark at the railroad, and as he and McCracken estimated two car loads in all, one car load must have been in the woods. The defendants’ evidence shows that the fire originating at the Smith house was due to the cleaning up of the yard by Smith for a little garden. Whether the burning of the bark resulted from this
An effort is made by counsel in argument here to support the general verdict on the ground that 'by limiting the items in the mutual accounts' between the parties to those covering their transactions subsequent to the date of the written contract a balance is shown in favor of the plaintiffs of some $5,000.00; but we do not think the verdict should be sustained on any such basis. Practically all the facts relating to all the transactions prior and subsequent to November 7, 1903, got before the jurjq and inasmuch as the verdict was without evidence to support it beyond $425.40, the defendants, we think, should have a new . trial, and it will be so ordered.
Reversed.