9 Or. 405 | Or. | 1881
By the Court,
This case has been here twice before, on appeal from the judgments of the circuit court for Douglas county, and a new trial awarded in each instance. (8 Or., 129 and 513.) Upon á change of venue to Marion county, a third trial by jury has been had, and the respondents have for the third time received judgment against the appellants upon their demand, and the defeated parties have again brought the case here by appeal, and ask to have the judgment reversed for errors alleged to
“ This article of agreement made and entered into this'29th day of May, 1878, between N. E. Mulvaney and E. C. Bemis, of firm name of Mulvaney & Bemis, of the first part, and H. O. Tenny and Neil McKenzie, of the firm name of Tenny & McKenzie, parties of the second part. Parties of the first part agree to pay parties of the second part, four dollars and twenty-five cents per thousand feet, for good, souud merchantable logs, delivered at the boom in Pass Creek; also agree to furnish timber for logs, not to exceed a mile from the bank of the creek, to scale each one hundred thousand feet that is in floating water. The parties of the second part agree to furnish logs to the parties of the first part, one million feet with privilege of furnishing as much more as can be put in the creek, in the year, from this date, in the boom in Pass Creek; the parties of the second part shall keep logs on hand for the parties of the first part, so that the mill shall not be shut down during the year, and are to cut four thousand feet, more or less, from Hickey Canyon.”
MULYANEY & BEMIS, .
TENNY & MoKENZIE.
And also upon an account for work and labor performed, declared upon as follows: “ And the plaintiffs, for a separate and further cause of action, allege that the plaintiffs, on or about the months of June and July, 1878, in the precinct of Drain, in Douglas county, Oregon, and at the special instance and request of the defendants, performed work and labor with men and teams, for the use and benefit of said defendants, and that said work and labor was and is necessarily worth the sum of thirty-two dollars and fifty cents. ■ That no part of the same has been paid, and the same is now due and owing, and unpaid, from the defendants to the plaintiffs.”
The respondents claim in their complaint to have delivered
The appellants admit in their answer, the delivery of 35,000 feet of good, sound, merchantable logs in the boom, and 95,000 feet in the floating water above, and deny any greater quantity, and deny the rest oí said allegation, and aver that respondents put into the boom, and in the water above, large amounts of unsound, unmerchantable logs, and prevented the appellants from getting logs to keep their mill running, etc., all of which is put in issue by the reply of the respondents.
Upon the trial the following question and answer, in the deposition of E. A. Estes, a witness for the respondents, was admitted by the court, and read to the jury, on behalf of the respondents, over the objection of the appellants that it was immaterial and irrelevant.
Ques. 6. “What quality was the lumber that you know them (referring to the defendants) to have manufactured from their logs? (referring to logs cut by plaintiffs in 1878 for defendants).”
Ans. “Well, I bought some of the lumber, and I considered it good, merchantable lumber; at least I paid full price for it —eleven dollars per thousand for rough, and twenty and one-half for dressed, at the mill.”
This ruling of the court was duly excepted to, and is the first error assigned here by the appellants. The bill of exceptions failing to show that the lumber spoken of by the witness was manufactured from the 35,000 feet of logs which appellants had admitted in their answer to have been delivered
The next exception taken by the appellants was to the ruling of the court admitting, over their objection for irrelevancy and immateriality, the following question and answer in the deposition of "W. A. Perkins, on behalf of the respondents.
Ques. 7. “ Were the logs which you scaled (referring to the logs which plaintiffs claimed they had cut for defendants, under their contract, as set out in the complaint) of the character of timber from which lumber is manufactured in that locality?” (referring to the locality of defendant’s saw-mill.)”
Ans. “I am of opinion that they do manufacture lumber of such logs as we scaled there. I believe some of them were manufactured into lumber, though I did not see them.”
This evidence appears to refer to all the logs which the respondents claim to have exit and delivered under their contract with the appellants, and was px’opei’iy admitted unless xxot tending to prove the delivery of logs of the quality stipulated for in the written contract bétween the parties. The words used in that contract, to denote the quality of logs to be delivered, are “ good, sound, merchantable logs.” Evidently these descriptive words should be consti-ued together, and in view of the use to be made of the logs which the written instrument shows to have been in contemplation of both parties when they executed it, and with reference to
A log might be “ good, sound and merchantable ” for many purposes, and yet not fit for being manufactured into lumber, and the same log might, owing to a difference in the settled usages of the business in two different localities, be deemed a “ merchantable ” log in one and not in the other. “ Merchantable” logs, then, in reference to the business of manufacturing lumber in any particular locality, are such logs as are ordinarily used for that purpose at that particular place, and if the usage of the business in that locality requires the logs ordinarily used to be “good and sound,” then the word “merchantable” would include the particular meaning of each, and render their employment of no utility in any such contract.
But whatever distinctions should properly be made as to the respective meanings of the words used in this instance, we think it was clearly competent to show by the witness that the logs in controversy were of the quality usually manufactured into lumber in that locality, to prove that they were “ merchantable ” logs. And this we understand to be the tendency of his testimony, as well as the object of its introduction. This was one step in the proof, and if it afforded no presumption that the logs were “ good and sound,” as well as “merchantable,” it afforded no inference to the contrary, most assuredly, nor does the bill of exceptions disclose any ground for such an inference. This exception must therefore be overruled also.
The third ground of objection insisted upon here is to the ruling of the court below, admitting in evidence, on behalf of the respondents, a certain paper, which the witness Perkins claimed to be a copy of the list of measurements of said logs, which original list had been made by himself and one Wm. Morris in the employment of the respondents, some time in the year 1878. Perkins’ testimony, as set out in the bill of exceptions, shows that Morris and himself measured the logs
But if these witnesses had been produced at the trial, and had testified that the measurements were correctly made, and truly entered in the “• scale-book,” and had shown by their testimony at the trial sufficient recollection of the previous transaction to qualify them to so testify, although unable then to testify from memory alone to the correctness of the particular items, so ascertained and entered, without reference to the “ scale-book,” the respondents would have been entitled to introduce the “ scale-book ” itself in evidence, in connection with such testimony. This we deem to be the rule established by the best considered authorities as the prevailing doctrine on the subject in the United States, and at the same time the most just and practical solution of the matter that
And if such proof had been in respect to the original memorandum, and it had been lost, or other circumstances shown excusing its production at the trial, we can perceive no valid objection to the admission of secondary evidence as to its contents — either parol or a duly authenticated copy. (Prince, Administratrix v. Smith, 4 Mass., 454; Wallace v. Goodall, 18 N. H., 455; Holmes v. Marden, 12 Pick., 169.)
Now, the objection of the appellants to the introduction of the copy produced by the witness Perkins, was that it had not been “ identified as the list that was made originally, and as incompetent and irrelevant.” Considering that this objection not only went to its secondary character as eA'idence, but also presented the question whether the necessary preliminary proofs already indicated as essential to its admission in evidence, had been made, still Ave are convinced, from a careful study of the bill of exceptions, that the issues thus made are narroAved doAvn in this court to the single question as to the sufficiency of the proof produced by the respondents at the 'triaL, to sIioay that the paper claimed to be a copy was in fact a correct copy of the original memorandum of the measurement in the “ scale-book.”
It does not appear from the bill of exceptions that ¥m. Morris Avas not called as a witness, or that the correctness of the measurements and entries in the “ scale-book ” Avas not satisfactorily proven by either Morris or Perkins, or admitted on the trial in aecoi’dance with the views expressed above; or that the testimony of Perkins set out in the bill of exceptions, and tending to show the loss of the original “ scale-book” in order to justify the introduction of the copy, which, standing alone, it must be confessed seems very slight and hardly sufficient for such a purpose, was the only proof of such loss that was made at the trial.
The statement in the bill of exceptions in regard to the matter, and immediately following the portions of Perkins’
It is plain that all the proof we have indicated as being necessary to justify the admission of such a memorandum in evidence, as well as all necessary proof of loss of the original, or of other circumstances dispensing with the necessity of producing the original memorandum, before offering secondary evidence of its contents, by copy or otherwise, may have been made, without in any manner conflicting with anything contained in the bill of exceptions, and we are bound under such circumstances to presume that it was made upon the principle already announced in passing upon the first exception.
The portion of Perkins’ deposition referred to above shows that he assisted Morris in making the measurement of logs and original memorandum thereof; that soon after that time (the exact period is not stated by the witness), he made the copy under consideration in the following manner: Someone, whom the witness was unable to'remember at the trial, called off the particular items of measurement, in the original memorandum, and the witness set them down as called off in the copy. These entries were only of the dimensions of the logs as ascertained by the measurement. The witness, after copying the dimensions as called off' from the original, made a calculation of the number of feet which each log contained, according to such dimensions, upon a separate sheet of paper, and transcribed the aggregate amount on the copy. He further testified in answer to question 12 that this copy contained a correct scale of the measurement made by Morris and himself of the logs in controversy, according to the “scale-book” by which he and the other person who called off the entries as above stated, ascertained the result. In answer to
This was all the evidence that was given on the trial, to establish the correctness of the copy. Was it sufficiently proven to justify its submission to the jury? It does not appear from the bill of exceptions that the testimony of the person who read off the items in the original memorandum to Perkins, when he copied them, could have been produced at the trial by the respondents; or that any better or additional evidence upon the question was in their power. We are of the opinion that the copy was sufficiently authenticated by the testimony of Perkins to justify its admission under the circumstances. In the absence of any testimony to the contrary, In's testimony would justify the jury in finding the copy to be a correct transcript of the original memorandum, and in returning their verdict accordingly.
That such testimony is competent to prove a copy and authorize the admission as secondary evidence, in a case where the original cannot or need not be produced, there can be no doubt. In addition to cases cited supra, see Perkins v. Crow, 19 Ill., 626; and Edwards v. Noyes, 65, N. Y., 125.
The case of Thomas’ Garnishee v. Price, 30 Maryland, 483, cited by appellants, is not in point. This decision was placed on the ground that Hancock, the witness who, like Perkins, in the case before us, made copy offered in evidence, exclusively from hearing the original — a mere private memorandum like the present- — had no knowledge of the correctness or incorrectness of the items in the original memorandum, and that a “mere copy” of such would not be admissible as evidence.
The court did not decide that the copy had not been suffi
The testimony of H. J. Mattoon and ffm. Rosee, witnesses for the respondents at the trial, which was objected to by the appellant,-but admitted by the court and exceptions taken, was properly admitted. Mattoon’s evidence referred exclusively to the logs hauled by him, and put into Pass creek for respondents, under their contract with appellants, and which he testified, were “ average logs for that timber, and defendants sawed them into lumber.”
It seems hardly necessary to discuss the description of these logs given by the witness when his testimony shows that all which were covered by the description, were accepted by the appellants and sawed into lumber. The appellants could no longer object to this portion of the logs in dispute, after having received and converted them into lumber, and as the testimony was limited to them, it could not have misled the jury as to the rest, even if the description had been inconsistent with the requirements of the contract, upon which we need not express our opinion.
Rosee testified to the amount of good, sound, merchantable timber remaining within the limits, from which the respondents were to cut the logs to be delivered under their contract, after they had procured the quantity which they claimed to have cut and delivered to the appellants. As they claimed damages for all they could and would have cut and delivered under their contract, had they not been prevented by appellants, as well as for the quantity actually cut and delivered, this testimony was relevant and proper in establishing their elaim to these prospective damages, and
The last exception, however, to the admission of the testimony of Neil McKenzie, one of the respondents, to establish the account of “ work and labor, etc.,” pleaded in the complaint as a separate cause of action, showing that respondents made a verbal contract with the appellants, by Avhich the latter undertook to remove a certain drift in Pass creek, which was in their way while rafting the logs down the creek to the saw-mill of the former, and that upon the failure of the appellants to remove the drift as per said verbal agreement, the respondents removed it, at a necessary expenditure of work and labor to the-amount of ten dollars, which constituted so much of the account of $32.50 sued upon, is clearly well grounded. There was no allegation in the complaint as to any such contract, and if entitled to recover this item of ten dollars at all, it was as damage for a violation of such verbal agreement, and not upon any implied pimnise to pay under the form of the allegation in the complaint. (Miller v. Mariner Church, 7 Greenleaf, 51; Loker v. Dunn, 17 Pick., 284.)
But as this error could only affect the verdict to an amount so small compared with the whole amount recovered, we shall not reverse the judgment if the respondents will release this amount on the judgment and pay the costs on appeal, but let it stand affirmed for the balance. (Boyd v. Foot and Cole,
On the point of sufficiency of the proof of the copy of the memorandum to justify its admission, Justice Waldo expresses no opinion.