66 W. Va. 671 | W. Va. | 1910
The Mate Creek Coal Company, a corporation, engaged in mining and selling coal, brought an action of assumpsit in the circuit court of Mingo county against Fred C. Todd, J. J. Sullivan and G-. S. Calder, partners in the business of selling coal, commonly known as a selling agency, doing business in the firm name of “Damascus Coal Company”; and on the 18th of September, 1907, recovered a judgment against them for $1,030.33. To this judgment defendants obtained a writ of error.
The action was brought to recover money which plaintiff claimed to be due it on account of coal sold and delivered to defendants in pursriance of a special contract of sale. The principal defense is that the coal was not prepared at the mine according to agreement, and not as defendants had ordered it to be prepared; that when lump coal was ordered it would often contain too great a per centum of slack; that on account of this
Defendants insists that it was error to give plaintiff’s instruction No. 3, which tells the jury that if they believe from the evidence that defendants undertook to sell plaintiff’s coal at the net price to plaintiff of ninety-five cents per ton for November shipments, one dollar and five cents for December shipments, and one dollar for January shipments, "then that the Jury must not allow any deduction from such net amounts on account of alleged expenses incurred by the defendants and rebates and demurrage.” Rebates are defined by some of the witnesses to be allowances, or deductions from the price, made by the defendants to some of their customers who claimed that the coal that was shipped to them was not the kind they had ordered, and as the loss incurred in sometimes reselling coal that had been shipped, to other customers who refused to receive it for a like reason; and demurrage is defined to be the charges made by the railroads for failure to unload cars within a reasonable time after they reached their destination, the charge usually being about one dollar per day.
Defendants testified that much of the coal which they ordered to be shipped to their customers as lump was rejected by said customers because it contained; too great a per cent of nut and slack, and that they had to .resell the coal at a less price to other buyers, and that in some instances they were ■ compelled to make a reduction in the original price to other of their customers for the same reason; also, that before they could make a resale of the coal they were necessarily delayed, and that they
No. 3 would tell the jury that in the absence of fault or negligence on the part of the agent, or factor, growing out of the business transacted by the agent, or factor, "for his principal, the agent, or factor, is not liable for any loss incurred; nor would such agent, or factor, be liable for any loss resulting from the improper preparation of the coal whereby a resale was made necessary, and demurrage and other expenses incurred. No. 5 would tell the jury that if defendants were acting as agents, or factors, for plaintiff, and had accounted to their principal for more money than they had been able to sell the coal for by the use of 'proper diligence and care, that then they would be entitled to recover back the excess so paid to their principal. The principles embraced in Nos. 1, 3 and 5, refused, are fully covered by defendants’ No. 7, before noticed, and by their No. 4, both of which were given. No. 4 is as follows: “The Court further instructs the jury that in the absence of a contract to the contrary, the principal is liable to the factor for all losses arising from the sale of the goods, the factor using due prudence both in making the sale and in attempting to collect the money, and if the Jury believe from the evidence in this case that the relation of principal and factor did exist between tire plaintiff and defendants during the time of the dealings testified to herein, and that there were any losses in the sale of the plaintiff’s coal, and that the defendants used due prudence both in making sale and in attempting to collect the money, and if the jury further believe that the defendants advanced to the plaintiff the price of said coal before learning of such losses, then the defendants are entitled to a credit on the sum sued upon in this action to the extent of all such losses.” It was, therefore, not error to refuse to repeat this law to the jury in the form of the instructions rejected.
This instruction was not proper, because there is no evidence to prove that the defendants’ customers to whom lump coal had been shipped had declined to receive it “for the reason that it did not meet the standard of lump coal passing over a one inch screen”; it is not even shown that any of said customers knew what was, or what should be, the standard of lump coal screened over such a screen, that is, what maximum per cent, of slack it should contain. The excuse given by them for rejecting the coal is that it did not come up to the standard of lump coal; that it contained too great a per cent, of nut and slack. Two or three of these customers say that there was as much as fifty or sixty per cent, of slack and nut in some of the coal which had been shipped to them as lump, but none of them state what portion of the nut and slack was slack, or what per cent, of the whole was slack. The only one of defendants’ customers who was asked to define what he regarded as lump coal says, that he supposed lump coal was prepared by being screened over a four inch screen, that nut coal was screened over a two inch screen and that what is commonly called pea coal was screened over a three-quarter inch screen. So far as the evidence discloses, all the other customers may have had the same idea in regard to the kind of screen necessary to produce these three different grades of coal, and may have rejected the coal, because it did not measure up to the standard of lump coal screened over a four inch screen. Plaintiff did not contract with defendants'to furnish any better grade of lump than could be prepared by running the coal over a one inch screen; its
It is insisted that the court erred in refusing to permit witness Todd to answer the following question: “What was this man O’Rouke’s financial ¿condition at the time you sold this coal to him?” ' It appears that O’Rourke was a coal dealer him’self, having his place of business in Chicago; that he failed in business and was adjudged a bankrupt; and defendants claim
We find no error in the record and the judgment of the lower court will be affirmed.
Affirmed.