81 Ala. 305 | Ala. | 1886
— The present action counts on the alleged breach of an oral contract. The two plaintiffs, Reed and Part-low, each testified as to the terms of the contract. Noble, secretary and treasurer of the Woodstock Iron Company,
The Woodstock Iron Company owned a tract of land, or the timber on it, of about eighty acres. On it were about two thousand cords of wood, ready cut and corded, and there was also standing timber on the tract that had not been cut. It was estimated that the timber on the tract — that cut and corded and that standing — would produce about one hundred thousand bushels of coal. The general estimate is that three cords of wood will yield one hundred bushels of coal. According to the testimony of this witness, the agreement was that Beed and Partlow would take the land and the timber as it was, fell and cord the standing timber, and the Woodstock Iron Company was to advance for Beed andPartlow fifty cents per cord, to pay for felling and cording the standing timber. Beed and Partlow were to have the standing timber felled and corded, convert the whole into coal, and deliver it to the Woodstock Iron Company, so many hundred bushels a day, and were to be paid for the coal at the rate of five 75-100 dollars per hundred bushels ; but the iron company was to withhold one dollar and fifty cents of every five 75-100 dollars, to reimburse it for the money paid for cutting and cording the wood. And this witness testified that the iron company paid for cutting and cording the wood according to this agreement, and charged the payments so made to Beed and Partlow. The contract was made about March 1, 1883.
The material difference between the testimony of Noble given above, and that of Beed and Partlow, is, that the latter do not say they were to have the standing timber cut. Their statement is, that they were to burn the wood into coal, and deliver it at five 75-100 dollars per hundred bushels, allowing the iron company to retain of the five 75-100 dollars, one and a half dollars for each hundred bushels delivered, to pay for cutting and cording the same. The testimony of these witnesses corresponds with the averments of the third count of the complaint.
About the last of August a fire broke out in the coaling-grounds and destroyed a large quantity of the corded timber, before it was burnt into coal; and the real question in this case is, which party shall lose the fifty cents per cord for cutting the timber, which was destroyed by the fire.
If the testimony of Noble be believed, there can be no question that to the extent the timber was cut and corded after the contract was made, and the labor so employed wag
In considering the question raised above, the inquiry is not as to the ownership of the timber before it was burned into coal. The true inquiry is, who was to have the timber cut? If that duty rested on Reed and Partlow — if they were to contract for and look after the cutting — and the agreement of the iron company was simply to advance for them to pay the laborers, and it did so advance, then the question is the simple one of money paid for another at his request, and indebitatus assumpsit will lie to recover it back. Such claim is a valid set-off. In other words, if Reed and Partlow undertook the entire service from the standing timber to the delivered coal at five 75-100 dollars per hundred bushels, and the iron company was to advance and did advance to pay the wood-cutters, with an agreement that it should withhold one and a half dollars of the agreed price for every hundred bushels delivered, as a means of reimbursing itself, then as to the timber cut after the contract was made, and destroyed by fire, the set-off should be allowed.
The timber cut and corded before the contract was made stands on a different principle. The inquiry as to this is delivery vel non. If by the terms of the agreement the control and dominion of the corded timber passed at once to Reed and Partlow, and if their contract was to do the entire service on the basis of five 75-100 dollars per hundred bushels, then they are accountable at the rate of fifty cents per cord for any of that timber that may have been destroyed. If, on the other hand, their dominion and possession was to date only from the time they took actual possession for the purpose of converting it into coal, then they would not be liable for any such timber they had not actually interfered with. Any actual interference, however, would amount to a taking of possession, and consummate the delivery ; and in such event, or in either such event, the corded timber would stand in the same category as the timber that was standing when the contract was made. The testimony as to the corded timber is not very full or satisfactory.
The record does not contain enough to show the Circuit
Reversed and remanded.