18 Mo. 509 | Mo. | 1853
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff alleges that he bought of the defendant (Kel-lerman) 4000 shingles, and that he received eight bundles or packs, which only contained 2,500, and having paid for 4000 brought this suit to recover the value of the number deficient. The defence made by Kellerman was, that by the custom of the lumber trade, two packs of a certain size are regarded as a thousand shingles, and are always bought and sold as such, without any count of the number, and that the eight packs delivered to Soutier were, according to such custom, properly reckoned as four thousand shingles.
1. The defendant asked the court below to declare the law in relation to the effect of the usage of the trade, and for that purpose presented two instructions, which the court refused. As this was a case brought 'into the court by appeal from a justice of the peace, the code of practice, which is not applicable to proceedings before a justice, is not applicable to the trial before the law commissioner on appeal. Such case is to be tried on the merits de novo, and the practice formerly prevailing, in trials by the court without a jury, of asking declarations of the law is, in such cases, still to be pursued.
2. The defendant asked the court to declare the law, as follows : 1. That if the shingles sold to the plaintiff were in ordinary sized packs, and that the price paid was a reasonable price for such kinds of packs, and that such packs are, by common custom, sold two for a thousand, then the plaintiff is not entitled to recover. 2. If the common custom of the lumber trade is to sell two bunches of shingles as a thousand, without regard to actual count, then the plaintiff must be presumed to have had notice of such general custom, and to have
The usage of a particular trade is evidence from which the intention and agreement of the parties may be implied; and, although it cannot control an express contract, made in such terms as to be entirely inconsistent with it, yet, in express contracts, the terms employed may have their true meaning and force best understood by reference to .such usage. Evidence of such usage is admitted, not to vary the terms of an express contract or to change its obligation, but to determine the meaning and obligation of the contract as made. The usage must appear to be so general and well established, that knowledge of it may be presumed to exist among those dealing in the business to which it applies, so that the contract of the parties may be taken to have been made with reference to it. In this country, many articles which are in terms sold by the bushel (a dry measure, containing eight gallons) are, in fact, sold by weight; the bushel being understood to mean a certain number of pounds, and the number of pounds differing in different articles, as salt, wheat, &c. When such custom becomes general and well established, so as to be known to the community, it is obvious that a contract for a given number of bushels, must mean the bushel as ascertained by weight, whether in fact the number of pounds of the article sold would measure more or less than the real bushel. The rule here stated, is laid down with great distinctness, in 8 Starkie’s Ev. 1033, and applied in Smith v. Wilson, 3 Barn. & Adolph. 728, to a case where 1000 rabbits was held to mean 1200.
In the present case, there was evidence that a general custom prevailed in the lumber trade of estimating two packs of shingles, of certain dimensions, as a thousand shingles, with
The judgment is reversed, with the concurrence of the other judges, and the cause remanded.