Beyer v. Martin

120 Ill. App. 50, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 599
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 20, 1905
StatusPublished

This text of 120 Ill. App. 50 (Beyer v. Martin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beyer v. Martin, 120 Ill. App. 50, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 599 (Ill. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Baume

delivered the opinion of the court.

May 17, 1900, appellants entered into a written contract with appellee, whereby appellee was to erect a saw mill upon timber land belonging to appellants, on the Illinois river bottom, and saw lumber from such timber and deliver the same upon the river bank.' The price to be paid to appellee for such lumber was $7.50, $8.50 and $9 per thousand feet according to dimensions. Payment was to be made at the end of each month for lumber so sawed and delivered. In July following, the contract was supplemented by giving to appellee the right to saw all lumber on 1,500 acres, appellee to saw 600,000 feet per annum. This suit was brought by appellee to recover an amount claimed to be due him for lumber sawed and not paid for at the contract price and for damages sustained by him in not being-permitted to perform his contract according to its terms.

There have been three trials of the ease : the first resulting in a verdict in favor of appellee for $1,200, which was set aside by the trial court; the second, resulting in a verdict and judgment in favor of appellee for $814.75, which judgment was, upon appeal, reversed, and the cause remanded by the judgment of this court (109 Ill. App. 1); and the third resulting in a verdict and judgment in favor of appellee for $800, from which judgment this appeal is taken. The suit was instituted in Tazewell county and two trials had there. The venue was then changed upon the application of appellants to McLean county, where the case was last tried.

It is urged that the verdict is not supported by the evidence. There is a wide discrepancy in the evidence introduced in behalf of the contending parties, with reference to the quantity of lumber sawed by appellee; whether the same was edged up and free from bark as required by the contract; whether appellee had been paid in full, upon the occasion of an alleged final settlement with appellants, and whether appellee, to his injury, was prevented by appellants from continuing work under the contract. The record in the case is voluminous and it would unduly extend this opinion to set out and consider in detail the various items involved. The account as stated by the respective parties to the litigation varies very materially, appellants’ account showing that they have over-paid appellee for work done under the contract and appellee’s account showing that there is still due him from appellants the sum of $811.31.

Over the objections of appellants the court permitted appellee to offer in evidence as “ Exhibit 8,” page 5 of a certain book, identified by the witness Jackson, as containing a correct summary of the aggregate amount of lumber sawed by appellee under the contract. It was not a book of original entries, even upon the theory advanced by counsel for appellee that the amount of lumber cut daily by each sawyer was by him marked upon a slate and then transferred to a pencil memorandum book and so ultimately found its way into the book offered in evidence. Clearly what appeared in the book did not purport to be a copy of the slate or of the pencil memorandum book, but merely a summary in the aggregate, of the quantity of lumber, in feet, sawed by appellee from “July 23 to Sept. 27,” from “Sept. 27 to November 1” and “after November 1.” If appellee’s claim, as to the quantity of lumber sawed by him, was not supported by other and competent evidence in the case, we should not hesitate to say there was no evidence in the record upon that question. Appellee testified that he sawed under the contract “ 203,000 and some feet, of lumber” and about 4,000 feet of crating. The witness Jackson testified that 1,016 logs were sawed into lumber and that they produced about 200,000 feet. The witness Atkinson testified that he sawed about 100,000 feet. The witness Shrefler testified that he sawed about 3,000 feet. The witness Meshman testified that he ran the saw two months, being about the same length of time as the witness Atkinson, who preceded him, operated it, and sawed 100,000 feet. We think the jury were warranted in finding from competent evidence in the record, that appellee produced something over 200,000 feet of lumber under his contract.

It is insisted that the court erroneously sustained objections to questions propounded by appellants’ counsel to the witness Sehertz for the purpose of ascertaining whether such witness had not agreed at or about the time he purchased the saw mill from appellee, to pay appellee for cutting and hauling the logs that were in the timber and mill yard at the time appellee ceased work under his contract, and whether witness had notin fact paid appellee therefor.. Appellee claimed nothing from appellants in that regard, but as to the logs mentioned, only claimed damages from appellants, for loss of profits sustained in not being permitted to saw them into lumber. Appellee’s objections to the questions were therefore properly sustained.

It was claimed by appellee that he was wrongfully compelled by appellants to quit his contract with them and thereby sustained damages to the amount of $3 per thousand feet, as profits he would have realized by sawing into lumber the logs on hand at that time. There is evidence tending to show that the logs then on hand would scale 121,496 feet in lumber; that appellants had not settled with appellee at the end of each month for lumber delivered as provided by the contract; that appellant Beyer told Schertz, that he had a mill to sell, referring to appellee’s saw mill; that Schertz subsequently offered appellee $100 for the mill; that appellant Yentes then told appellee, that if he (appellee) sawed the logs on hand he (Yentes) would not pay for them; that Yentes asked appellee if he had sold the mill yet, and upon appellee’s replying that he had not, that he had only been offered $100 for it, Yentes said to appellee: “You had better sell; $100 is better than nothing and if you don’t sell I will close it out by the 9th of next month;” that appellee at that time was ready, able and willing to proceed under his contract.

We are not prepared to say that the foregoing evidence does not tend to sustain appellee’s contention that he was wrongfully prevented from completing his contract with appellant. Aside from any reference by appellant Yentes of his intention to close appellee out by a certain date, we think his statement to appellee that he would not pay for sawing logs then on hand, was a threat which operated to induce appellee to dispose of the mill upon the best terms obtainable.

By the first instruction given at the request of appellee, the jury were told to “totally disregard any and all newspaper statements concerning the case, if any have come to your notice during the trials.” Appellants’ criticism of this instruction is that “ it was probably taken by the jury to mean that the appellants, or some one for them, had procured newspaper statements to be made that were untrue and prejudicial to appellee.” This instruction belongs to a class, designated as “cautionary instructions,” the giving or refusing of which, is largely discretionary with the trial court. In this ease we must- assume that the trial judge properly exercised such discretion in giving the instruction. Instructions given in a case are not the instructions of the plaintiff or defendant, but the instructions of the court upon the law applicable to the case.

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Related

Beyer v. Martin
109 Ill. App. 1 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1903)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
120 Ill. App. 50, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beyer-v-martin-illappct-1905.