73 Wis. 20 | Wis. | 1888
The appellant commenced an action against the defendants, Miller & Neff, and finally obtained judgment therein for the sum of $2,585.11, and in the mean time garnished the respondent, who took issue by denying all liability to the defendants, and the issue was submitted to John E. Martin, Esq,, as a referee, for trial. In February, 1885, it appears, the firm of Miller & Wright owned a steam saw-mill, and the respondent garnishee owned pine-
On hearing the evidence the referee stated an account between the defendants and respondent, with various appropriate findings which need not be specially noticed, and made the sum total of the defendants’ account $21,575.56, and the sum total of the respondent’s account of payments, etc., $19,502.11. On motion of the respondent the circuit court modified the report of the referee, and found that two large items of the defendants’ account were not chargeable to the respondent garnishee. These two items deducted from the defendants’ account, the defendants owe the respondent a balance of $3,116.31, instead of the respondent owing the defendants a balance of $2,073.45, as found by the referee, so that these two items only need to be considered.
The first one of $4,200, allowed to the defendants, arises from a certain written contract between the respondent and Miller & Wright, by their names, Mathew Miller and N. S. Wright, and under seal, dated February 25, 1885, by which Miller & Wright were to cut and haul to their sawmill all the down timber and pine slashings on certain lands • of the respondent, and all the slashings and windfalls that he might buy on other land, and to manufacture the same into lumber and shingles as the respondent might from time to time direct. For all the shingles of the grade of “ Star A Star,” which they should manufacture and de
But in case the written contract had not been so changed, the learned counsel of the appellant contends that the contract itself is such that in equity it may be apportioned and the plaintiff recover for its part performance in getting out the logs, on the basis of a quantum meruit. If there ever was an entire contract, or one could be made, it is this one. It is only “ after all the lumber [is] so manufactured by the [defendants] out of said timber and mill, and safely piled in [their] mill-yard,” that the respondent “agrees to pay the [defendants] the sum of $6 per thousand feet.” It is impossible to apportion it without making a new contract for the parties. The logs are left in the defendants’ pond, and at great expense have to be taken to some other mill to be manufactured, or sold at great loss where they are, and it seems that such expense would likely exceed the entire contract price. The manufacture of the logs into lum
It is contended that the respondent waived complete performance of the contract by taking possession of the logs. It seems that he took possession of the logs over a year after the defendants had abandoned them and were insolvent. The logs were his property, and he had a right to take possession of them and save himself from loss to some extent if he could.
The other item allowed as a credit to the defendants by the referee, and which was disallowed by the court, was of property mortgaged by Miller & Neff to the respondent to secure $1,500 for money borrowed, and which was taken possession of and sold by the respondent under the mortgage. The property was of the value of $925, and one year’s interest of $64.75 was added to this amount by the referee, as if the property had been unlawfully taken or wrongfully converted. This loan and mortgage appear to have been independent of the other dealings between the parties, and
There may be some other items of the defendants’ account disallowed by the court, but it is unnecessary to consider them, as the two already disposed of make the defendants largely in debt to the respondent. The amount of such indebtedness is not material. It is sufficient for this case that the respondent, as garnishee, is not indebted to the defendants in any sum whatever. "We see no reason for revising the allowance by the clerk to the referee.
By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.