69 W. Va. 598 | W. Va. | 1911
The plaintiff in error complains of the allowance of a deduction, by way of recoupment, of about $400.00 from the amount claimed in its action of assumpsit against the defendants in error, to recover the purchase price of lumber sold and delivered to them. The matters in difference were submitted to a jury and most of the numerous assignments of error relate to rulings made in the course of the trial, all of which will be better understood after a statement of the facts and the positions assumed by the parties.
The plaintiff, engaged in the manufacture and sale of lumber, undertook to furnish the defendants, general dealers in that commodity, 400,000 feet of two inch hemlock lumber, with
The most important provisions of the written offer and acceptance, constituting the contract, read as follows: “In ac
The defendants refused the lumber tendered Nov. 10, 1905, because, in their opinion, it contained an undue percentage of short lengths and narrow widths, protesting their inability to handle the lumber in that form advantageously, and insisting upon their right to a reasonable percentage in each installment of all widths and all lengths, to enable them to dispose of the lumber in the market as the market called for it. They further insisted that the narrow widths and short lengths were the less desirable portions of the lumber contracted for, and not sale-able at a fair price, unless mixed with lumber of greater dimensions in length and breadth. The contract allowed 140,000 feet in short lengths. The lumber of these lengths tendered as the-first installment amounted to about 104,000 feet. As stated, it had only two dimensions in width, four and six inches. The contract did not guarantee any percentage of any particular width, but it did contemplate lumber ranging in width from four to twelve inches. The plaintiff insisted upon its right to furnish its full percentage of any length all at one time and any
We have said the defendants were dealers in lumber, buying to resell in the market. The evidence fully establishes this. Presumptively, the plaintiff knew it, but we are not left to mere presumption. The letter of acceptance clearly indicated it, saying “Tou are no doubt aware that on an ordinary order the percentage of 18 and 20 ft. stock is usually a little more than 14 ft. and under,” and again, “We are just completing an order of two million feet of hemlock now, we had with one mill this summer.” Before these letters were written, the agent of defendants conferred with plaintiff's representatives and the contract was then made. The conversation between them is not in the record, but it must be presumed that, in making a contract for six or eight thousand dollars worth of lumber, the plaintiff previously obtained some knowledge of the character and business of the vendees. It must have known, therefore, the disadvantages to the vendees of the kind of performance it offered, and that no such thing was contemplated by the latter in entering into the agreement. In undertaking to furnishing them with lumber for sale in the general market, it impliedly, if not expressly, agreed to furnish the lumber in a condition suitable for disposition in the general market. The specifications of widths and lengths and percentages of lengths fairly indicate the kinds of lumber desired and expected by the defendants. The failure to stipulate for certain percentages of widths was clearly not a waiver of all right on the part of the vendees in respect to that. Nothing in the contract or circumstances indicates intent on their part to make a one-sided contract in regard to widths. They stipulated as positively for twelve inch widths as for four inch widths and also for the intermediate widths. The nature and purpose of the contract and all the circumstances must be taken into consideration. Failure to stipulate for quantities of certain widths left the plaintiff free from obligation to furnish any certain percentage of the lumber in any width, and prevented the defendants from demanding it,
If the language of a contract or agreement is on its face ambiguous, the courts will look at the surrounding circumstances, at the situation of the parties and the subject matter of the contract, for aid in giving a construction to its language. Titchenell v. Jackson, 26 W. Va. 460; Heatherly v. Bank, 31 W. Va., 70; Caperton's Admr. v. Caperton's Heirs, 36 W. Va. 70; Scraggs v. Hill, 37 W. Va. 706; Shrewsbury v. Tufts, 41 W. Va. 212; 9 Cyc, 587. The court is not limited in the interpretation of the contract to the mere letter of its words. Its spirit and purpose may be considered. We may here repeat the observation made in Gas Co. v. Oil Co., 56 W. Va. 402, “This method of interpreting the contract may, to some extent, seem to go beyond its terms, in dealing with them in the light of the subject matter, the situation of the parties, the purpose of the contract, the attendant circumstances and the conduct of the parties, but, when the terms of an instrument are uncertain or indefinite, it. is proper to do so.-” That which is not inconsistent with the terms of a written contract and plainly within its purpose, as indicated by the situation of the parties and all the circumstances, may be supplied, or treated as included in it. Such construction does no violence to the terms of the contract. This agreement is silent upon the sujebct of percentages of widths. From this a mere slight implication arises against the conclusion here stated, but it is only an implication, and, being such, the plain intent of the parties, deduced from their purposes, their situation and all the circumstances, completely overthrows it. “Where a manufacturer contracts to sell to a dealer or middleman, who buys, as the manufacturer knows, to sell again, there is an implied warranty on the part of the manufacturer that the thing sold shall be reasonably fit for the purpose for which it is made and for which the dealer intends to sell it.” 12 A. & E. Ene. L. 1235. Of course this relates to quality, hut it applies the principle here enforced. Though perhaps not so
'Under the designation of “custom,” the defendants were permitted to prove that, in the execution of such contracts as the one involved here, the buyer demanded and the seller furnished the lumber in installments, containing reasonable percentages of the lengths and widths contemplated. Their knowledge of the subject was derived chiefly from their own practice and experience in the business. This evidence was objected to on the ground that the witnesses had not .shown themselves qualified to testify to it as a usage or custom and also that it failed to prove one. The designation of the evidence as that of custom-, usage or practice was, to some extent, a misnomer and misinterpretation of it. To a very considerable extent, it was proof of the market conditions contemplated by the contract and in view of which it was made. The witnesses stated these conditions and their experience under them. If, however, they correctly designated the practice, and it amounted to a usage or custom, they were qualified to testify on the subject, by their experience and knowledge. Smith said he had had experience with the saw-mill people of every state. W. A. Wilson’s testimony showed extensive experience in the lumber business and great familiarity with timber and lumber transactions. ■ Moreover, his competency seems not to have been questioned. The custom, usage, experience, description of methods of manufacture, shipment and sale, or whatever it may be, strictly considered, harmonizes with the legal construction of the contract, and was relevant, material and admissible.
An exception was taken to the action of the court in sustaining an objection to a question, asking a witness whether there was a custom, giving the buyer right to dictate sizes to be shipped, in the case of a contract like the one in question. Though the court sustained such an exception, the question was re-propounded in different form and answered. The action of the court in sustaining an objection to a question of the same kind relating to the first shipment under such a contract, is also complained of. The cross-examination on this subject was very lengthy and
Fumerous objections 'were made to testimony tending to prove the difference between the contract prices of the lumber and the market prices, when it should have been delivered or was demanded and refused, as showing what profits the defendants lost in consequence of the plaintiff’s breach of the contract. All of these exceptions, as well as others based upon the action of the court in refusing to direct a verdict for the plaintiff for the amount of its claim and to set aside the verdict, were founded upon the view that the deducted claim was not a proper subject of set-off, it being a claim for unliquidated damages. Though called a set-off, it was really a claim of recoupment. It was not a debt due the defendants, growing out of a different transaction and founded upon a consideration other than the contract out of which the controversy arose, constituting a proper subject of set-off. It was for damages growing directly out of a breach of the contract sued on. Hence, it was a claim for recoupment, not one of set-off. This being so, the character of the damages,
Seeing no error in the judgment, we affirm it.
Affirmed.,