59 Wis. 384 | Wis. | 1884
The contract was that the plaintiffs, as partners, should saw at their mills at the city of New London, during the sawing season of 1881, for the defendants, as partners, 1,000,000 feet of basswood and elm logs, and 50,000 feet of oak logs, to be delivered at the plaintiffs’ mill for that
First, for the purpose of making a preponderance of evidence in favor of the position of the defendants that no such contract was made, the defendants offered to show as “ surrounding circumstances,” (1) that when the pretended contract was made the defendants did not have or own the 100,000 feet of hemlock logs so promised to be delivered to the plaintiffs in part payment for such sawing, but had sold the same some time before to other parties; (2) that at or about the time when said contract was pretended to have been made the defendant Howie had instructed or advised his copartner Mellor not to enter into any such contract unless
It is not claimed that these facts were evidence unless-as res gestee. By the rule cited by the learned counsel of the appellant, from Greenleaf on Evidence [Vol. I, sec. 51a], that such facts are admissible if they tend to prove the issue, or constitute a link in the chain of proof, there was no such intimacy between these facts and the fact of making the contract as would make them a part of the res gestae, or have any legitimate bearing upon the issue. These facts involve the conduct of one party some time before the date of the contract, in respect, perhaps, to the whole or some part of the subject matter of the future contract, of which the other party had no knowledge and in which they had no concern. It is not perceived how they can be made to affect the contract as a part of the res gestae. It is difficult to perceive how any extraneous facts and circumstances can be res gestae of the fact that no contract was made. They might be of the contract that was made, for the purpose of determining its terms and proper construction. They must be the essential circumstances of the transaction, and if no such transaction was entered into it can have no surrounding circumstances or res gestae. It is merely an offer to show that the one party was so situated that it was improbable that he should have so contracted. If he could show that he was so situated that it was impossible by absence, that would be an alibi, or by any other disability, that would go to the very issue as to whether the contract was in fact made. But a mere improbability inferred from any other facts and circhuistances than those which legitimately form a part of the transaction, consisting of the conduct or statements of one party, in the absence and without the knowledge of the other party, and some time before the date of the pretended contract, that any such contract was not in fact made, cannot and ought not to have any bearing upon the fact. ■ What
Second. The circuit court instructed the jury, at the request of the respondents’ counsel, that “admissions are regarded as weak testimony.” There was testimony tending to show that both of the plaintiffs, Wash and Weatherby, had admitted to witnesses that no such contract had been consummated, and these admissions were denied by them. The jury must have understood that this instruction referred to
Third. Exception was taken to the instruction given, “ that if the plaintiffs are entitled to recover they are entitled to recover the difference between the contract price of doing the work and what it would have cost them to have performed the work.” Exception was also taken to the refusal of the court to charge the jury substantially as asked by the defendants’ counsel, that if the plaintiffs were entitled to recover anything, they could recover only nominal damages.
Fourth. Another exception taken by defendants’ counsel was to the refusal of the court to instruct the jury that “ the plaintiffs have not shown that they have sustained more than nominal damages.” This was a question of fact more properly to be left to the jury than to be found by the court, but there was testimony of one of the plaintiffs as a witness, and of another witness, what the cost of doing this work would have been had the logs been furnished under the contract, and that evidence, together with the price fixed by the contract, furnished the necessary data for the computation of the profits which the plaintiffs were entitled to recover.
Fifth. It is claimed by the learned counsel of the appellants that it was in proof that the plaintiffs’ mill was occupied throughout the season, and that therefore the plaintiffs should recover only nominal damages, or the profits which they received from such constant use of their mill should be deducted from the damages fixed by the above rule. There was no evidence that the mill was employed during the season to its full capacity, and that the plaintiffs could not have readily performed this work in addition to what sawing was done in the mill during that season. Whether such a deduction can be allowed in such a case, even if proof had been
Sixth. It is further claimed by the learned counsel of the appellants that the 100,000 feet of hemlock logs should not be rated as a part of the contract price for doi ng the work at the price fixed in the contract of three dollars per thousand for the hemlock logs, and that it was incumbent upon the plaintiffs to have proved the real value of those logs at the time and place of delivery. The contract first stipulates for the whole price of the Avorlc, and then provides that the plaintiffs should receive, as part thereof, 100,000 feet of hemlock logs, at three dollars per thousand. When the parties have so stipulated and agreed upon their value, it -would seem that such value should stand as irrevocably fixed, except by a change of the contract. It would, in such a case, seem to be grossly unjust to the defendants to allow the plaintiffs to show that the value was far above that agreed upon by the parties, in order to enhance their damages, and it would be equally so to the plaintiffs to allow the defendants to prove that they were worth much less than the agreed value. The case of Starr v. Light, 22 Wis., 433, cited by the appellants’ counsel, is not in point. In that case suit was brought for the consideration of the sale of land which was to be paid in wheat at a fixed price per bushel. The defendant insisted upon paying that price in
I have been compelled to enter into this discussion and the examination of the authorities, because the defendants may well claim that if the price fixed in the contract, at which the hemlock logs are to be received, is not the rule of the plaintiffs’ damages for a failure to deliver the same, then the plaintiffs failed to prove any damages therefor, and the instruction of the court that their measure of damages was in view of the contract price, was erroneous. It is not enough to say, in view of this principle, that, in the absence of any proof of the value of the lo^s, the contract price therefor is to be taken as that value. If the price fixed in the contract can have any effect whatever in fixing the value or the measure of damages, then it must have full effect, and determine the same. There cannot be two rules in such a case. The language in the case of Courcier v. Graham, 2 Ohio, 154, is: “ This price was agreed upon by the parties. The valuation is made, and he assents to it. lie agreed to the price of the goods with a full knowledge of their character. No fraud was practiced or intended.” It must be borne in mind that this suit is not for the failure of the defendants to deliver the hemlock logs. It is for damages on the whole contract, to be estimated by the contract price, if there is any, and the cost of performance by the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs are not entitled to the logs, and therefore not to their value. The rule in such a case is properly stated in Ganson v. Madigan, 13 Wis., 67, a case where the contract was to pay for property to be delivered at a fixed price, and is stated also in the following cases: Harrington v. Wells, 12 Vt., 505; White v. Tompkins, 52 Pa. St., 363; Perry v. Smith, 22 Vt., 301; Pinney v. Gleason, 5 Wend., 393; Trowbridge v. Holcomb, 4 Ohio St., 38; Grieve v. Annin, 1 Halst., 463; Smith v. Dunlap, 12 Ill., 184;
By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.