Austin v. Brown Bros.

164 P. 95, 30 Idaho 167, 1917 Ida. LEXIS 29
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 164 P. 95 (Austin v. Brown Bros.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Austin v. Brown Bros., 164 P. 95, 30 Idaho 167, 1917 Ida. LEXIS 29 (Idaho 1917).

Opinion

RICE, J.

In June, 1905, the plaintiff and respondent executed an order to the defendant and appellant to furnish him with 500 apple trees, together with 45 pear, cherry, peach and plum trees, the variety of trees to be furnished and the prices to be paid therefor being fully set out. At the same time and place, respondent’s brother and brother-in-law executed orders for various amounts of nursery stock, the exact number of trees ordered by them being not material in this case. Upon the execution of these orders it was suggested by appellant’s agent that for convenience in shipping and in buying the trees a combined order should be made and the three orders shipped in one. The combined order was thereupon prepared and signed by respondent. The combined order differed from the original order executed by the respondent, in that it contained the following provision which the original order did not contain: “Any stock which does not prove to be true to name as labeled is to be replaced free or purchase price refunded; and all stock to be delivered in a thrifty and healthy condition.”

The trees were delivered at Twin Falls in the spring of 1906. They were taken to the premises of the respondent and there divided among the three parties, each taking the trees that he had ordered. The trees arrived labeled so as to indicate the variety and number of trees. Respondent planted his trees in the spring of 1906 on his premises, consisting of a forty-acre subdivision, and cared for them until about April, 1910, when he discovered that a large part of the trees so planted and eared for by him were not true to name. Among the 500 trees ordered by him were 300 Jonathan and 130 Rome Beauty trees. No Jonathan or Rome Beauty trees were received, but instead the trees proved to be Wolf River, Peewaukees and an unknown variety. Respondent brought suit against the appellant to recover damages suffered as a result of the breach of the contract. The ease was tried to a jury and a verdict was rendered in favor of respondent in the sum of $1,500.

[171]*171The appellant assigns twenty-six specifications of error as ground for reversing the judgment, but relies principally upon those hereinafter considered.

Appellant in its answer set out a copy of the combined order claiming that said order constituted the contract between the parties. At the beginning of the trial the court, over the objection of appellant, permitted respondent to introduce his individual order. The specific objection was that the order was not the same as the order signed by the respondent in this action, as set forth in the answer, and inasmuch as there was no denial of the order as required by the statute it was admitted to have been the order made by the defendant. See. 4201, Rev. Codes, reads as follows: “When the defense to an action is founded on a written instrument, and a copy thereof is contained in the answer, or is annexed thereto, the genuineness and due execution of such instrument are deemed admitted, unless the plaintiff file with the clerk, within ten days after receiving a copy of the answer, an affidavit denying the same, and serve a copy thereof on the defendant.” It is admitted that no affidavit denying the combined order was filed or served on appellant. The genuineness and due execution of the contract alleged in the answer was therefore admitted.

In the case of Cox v. Northwestern Stage Co., 1 Ida. 376, this court held that due execution of an instrument of writing goes to the manner and form of its execution by persons competent to execute it according to the laws and customs of the country where executed. The genuineness of an instrument in writing goes to the question of its having been an act of the party, just as represented; or, in other words, that the signature is not spurious, and that nothing has been added to or taken from it, which would lay the party signing or changing the instrument liable for forgery.

It does not follow that by admitting the genuineness and due execution of the instrument pleaded in the answer the respondent admitted that such instrument was the contract between the parties, nor was the respondent precluded thereby from taking any other position in avoidance of the effect of the contract which is not inconsistent with the admission of [172]*172its genuineness and due execution. (Cox v. Northwestern Stage Co., supra; Martin v. Dowd, 8 Ida. 453, 69 Pac. 276; Moore v. Copp, 119 Cal. 429, 51 Pac. 630; Brooks v. Johnson, 122 Cal. 569, 55 Pac. 423.)

The individual order and the combined order are parts of one transaction and should be considered together, but the plaintiff could not be relieved of any obligation or provision contained in the joint order, which was the last one signed. The difference between them is material only in view of the fact that the combined order contained the provision, quoted above, which was not in the individual order.

In the case of Sanford v. Brown Bros. Co., 134 App. Div. 652, 119 N. Y. Supp. 333, a contract for nursery stock containing this provision was construed. In considering the contract that court laid down the three following propositions :

First: Where a contract for the sale of fruit trees is prepared by the seller to be signed by the buyer,, any uncertainty or ambiguity therein is to be resolved in favor of the buyer.

Second: That such a contract for the sale of nursery stock contained an implied condition precedent requiring a substantial performance by the seller, for breach of which the buyer was entitled to recover compensatory damages.

Third: That the provision of the contract quoted above applied only to such mistakes as were liable to occur in the substantial performance of the contract, and unless there was a substantial performance, the plaintiff’s recovery for breach was not limited to the price of the trees not delivered.

In view of the foregoing construction of this contract, which appears to be correct, it was necessary to determine whether or not there had been a substantial compliance with the contract by the appellant, for if it failed substantially to fulfil its contract, the rule of damages in the case of breach of the individual order and the combination order would be the same.

It seems that the trial court attempted to submit to the jury the question as to substantial compliance with the order [173]*173upon the part of appellant by giving the following instruction:

‘ ‘ The jury are instructed that if you find from the evidence that the defendant company failed to substantially perform its contract by delivering to the plaintiff the trees that were ordered or trees of a quality and variety equally as good as those ordered, then your verdict must be for the plaintiff. By substantial performance is meant not a strict literal performance of the contract by delivering the exact number of each variety and hind of trees, but a reasonable compliance with the contract as to varieties, with such mistakes as were liable to occur, considering the size of the order and delivery.”

The appellant contends that this instruction is faulty in that it does not inform the jury of their duty in case they found there was a substantial compliance, and might be construed by the jury as tantamount to an instruction that there was not a substantial compliance. We think, however, that the instruction, under the facts of this case, did not operate to deprive the appellant of any substantial right.

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Bluebook (online)
164 P. 95, 30 Idaho 167, 1917 Ida. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/austin-v-brown-bros-idaho-1917.