Adams v. Merrill

74 A.2d 232, 145 Me. 181
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJune 12, 1950
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 74 A.2d 232 (Adams v. Merrill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Merrill, 74 A.2d 232, 145 Me. 181 (Me. 1950).

Opinion

Fellows, J.

This action of assumpsit for money had and received, with specifications under omnibus counts, was tried before a jury in the Superior Court for Sagadahoc County. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff for $520. The case comes to the Law Court on the defendant’s general motion for a new trial. The grounds stated in the *182 motion are that the verdict is against the law and the evidence. There is no claim for excessive damages.

The specifications under the common counts allege that “on or about December 2, 1946 he (plaintiff) paid to the defendant the sum of $500, and on March 17, 1947 he paid the defendant an additional $500 whereby the defendant was to sell and deliver to him logs at the rate of $30 per thousand feet mill scale or a total of 33,333 board feet, mill scale, but that the said defendant only delivered to the plaintiff 16,000 feet mill scale of logs and refuses to deliver any more to the plaintiff, whereby the plaintiff is entitled to receive from the defendant the sum of $520.”

At the trial the plaintiff testified, and offered other evidence tending to prove, that the defendant delivered 16,441 board feet to him under the agreement, and refused to deliver additional logs sufficient to make up the necessary number of board feet paid for by the plaintiff. The defendant claimed that “log scale” and not “mill scale” was the agreement and that he had delivered logs to the plaintiff in excess of 48,000 board feet. The jury returned a verdict for the exact amount claimed by the plaintiff in the declaration.

There is no dispute that there was an agreement between the parties for the purchase and sale of logs at $30 per thousand. It is admitted that the plaintiff paid to the defendant the sum of $1,000. The question of whether log scale or mill scale controlled the measurements became unimportant as the trial progressed, because the defendant’s testimony if believed, showed a delivery of logs to the plaintiff which would more than satisfy the contract.

The real question before the jury was the number and amount of logs delivered by the defendant to the plaintiff at the mill of the plaintiff. The question before the Law Court, presented by the motion for new trial, is whether the verdict of the jury was clearly wrong. The defendant as the moving party has the burden of showing that the *183 verdict was the result of “prejudice, bias, passion or mistake.” Jannell v. Myers, 124 Me. 229; McCully v. Bessey, 142 Me. 209, 49 Atl. (2nd) 230; Rawley v. Palo Sales, Inc., 144 Me. 375, 70 Atl. (2nd) 540.

There is an irreconcilable conflict in the testimony. The plaintiff Adams testified that he received at his mill a total of exactly 16,441 feet, based on the scale of the marker. The marker, whose duty was to determine the number of board feet in the lumber as sawed, kept a record, as he testified, of the days worked and the number of feet sawed each day, which record substantiated the plaintiff’s story. Both the plaintiff and his marker testified that all the logs delivered by the defendant to the plaintiff’s mill were sawed by the plaintiff before March 17, 1947. All logs delivered by the defendant were sawed, and the total delivered was only 16,441 feet. Another witness for plaintiff testified that when the operation ended in March 1947, all the logs had been sawed with the exception of “four or five” on the bank near the mill. The plaintiff testified that he sold 7,071 feet to a Lewiston lumber company, and of the remainder, 2,000 feet was used to “build the mill and put a roof over the engine and the remainder was in the pit.”

The defendant Merrill testified that “before Christmas, when operations ceased for a while, we put 48,000 feet of logs on the ramp,” and that in addition to the 48,000 defendant says he delivered in March 9,000 feet more. Defendant “estimated” that in March “there might have been fifteen or twenty thousand there.” The defendant stated that he measured the logs that he delivered, although he had no experience in scaling logs. Defendant says he kept a record but “I don’t know where it is.” The foreman, cutting for the defendant on the defendant’s wood lot, stated that he showed the defendant Merrill how to scale the logs and that he as foreman scaled “some of the logs as they were cut” but “didn’t scale any of the logs on the brow.” The defendant’s foreman gave as his judgment that 48,000 feet went to the “brow” at the mill before Christmas, and that *184 9.000 more went in March. The man who took logs out of the woods in November for the defendant, and who placed them on the “brow” at the plaintiff Adams’ mill, said that he hauled “approximately” 48,000, but he did not haul any in March.

Clifford W. Gray, a deputy sheriff called by the defendant, testified that he sold on execution in favor of First Auburn Trust Company against this plaintiff Adams on July 3, 1947, as property of this plaintiff Adams, “logs, lumber, slabs and a Fordson tractor for $480.” The property sold had been attached previously and was “close by the mill.” On the day of the sale the deputy sheriff said “we estimated 12.000 board feet of logs and about 10,000 feet of sawed lumber.” There was only one bidder at the sale, a Mr. Coverly from the bank, and neither this plaintiff nor this defendant were present. The bid was the amount of the execution held by the bank.

The testimony of the plaintiff and his witnesses is that there were only 16,441 feet delivered altogether. The evidence of the defendant and his witnesses was that 48,000 feet of logs were delivered by the defendant before March and 9,000 feet more in March, or a total of 57,000 feet. The plaintiff says that at the time he stopped sawing in March there were no.logs on the ramp or about the mill, and that after the plaintiff paid defendant the second payment of $500 on March 6th, there were only “two scootfulls put on” or “approximately” 1,100 feet. The deputy sheriff’s testimony however, and the deputy was the only witness on either side who was apparently disinterested, was that later on July 3, 1947 there were 12,000 board feet of logs and 10.000 feet of sawed lumber at the mill. The plaintiff admits that he was “told” logs were sold by the sheriff in July but they could not have been “my logs” because there were “none left, not a single log.” The plaintiff further said “I know there were logs bought, I don’t know where they .came from.”

*185 The court does not intend to indicate that the testimony of the deputy sheriff is entitled to full and absolute credence on the question of the amount of logs and lumber belonging to the plaintiff and near the mill. The deputy is only a witness, but his estimate of amount is to be seriously considered as testimony of a disinterested witness who had an official purpose in being there and who had certain duties to perform.

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Related

Johnson v. Parsons
135 A.2d 273 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1957)
Davis v. Ingerson
93 A.2d 129 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1952)

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Bluebook (online)
74 A.2d 232, 145 Me. 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-merrill-me-1950.