Blue Valley Lumber Co. v. Abner Conro & Son

84 N.W. 402, 61 Neb. 39, 1900 Neb. LEXIS 62
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 1900
DocketNo. 9,271
StatusPublished

This text of 84 N.W. 402 (Blue Valley Lumber Co. v. Abner Conro & Son) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blue Valley Lumber Co. v. Abner Conro & Son, 84 N.W. 402, 61 Neb. 39, 1900 Neb. LEXIS 62 (Neb. 1900).

Opinion

Holcomb, J.

On J anuary 9, 1892, Conro & Son, defendants in error, wholesale lumber dealers of Rhinelander, Wisconsin, under a written contract, sold to the Bine Valley Lumber Company of Omaha, plaintiff in error, abont 6,000,000 feet of pine Timber in the rough, at the agreed price of $12 p.er thousand feet; abont 900,000 feet of an inferior [41]*41grade, and about 85,000 feet of culls for $4.50 per thousand feet. A quantity of shingles and lath were also included in the contract of sale at a certain price per thousand, as therein named. Contemporaneous with the sale contract of the lumber mentioned a companion agreement was entered into, botli agreements being part of an entire contract, by which Conro & Son agreed to dress in their planing mill, located at the same place, the rough lumber heretofore mentioned, into suitable material of different, kinds and grades ordinarily used in the trade. Under the planing-mill contract, so much per thousand, according to the kind of lumber, was to be paid for the planing or dressing, which was to be done as directed by the purchaser, the Blue Valley Lumber Company. There were also in this agreement provisions for charges for sorting and handling the lumber required in its preparation for sale and shipment to the trade generally. Under these contracts it seems to have been contemplated that the rough lumber, when dressed under the planing-mill contract into suitable material and different grades, and as sold to the trade by the Blue Valley Lumber Company, the purchaser under the contract mentioned, and as by them directed, was to be shipped by Conro & Son, who were to collect the amounts due on account of such shipments and credit the Blue Valley Company with the amounts so collected, and in this manner Conro & Son were to receive pay1 ment of the sums due them for the sale of the lumber, and the planing-mill work to be performed thereon. On the 4th day of August following, and after about two-thirds of the lumber purchased had been sold by the Blue Valley Lumber Company, and shipped by Conro & Son at their direction to whomever might be the purchaser, they assigned all their right and interest in the contract mentioned to one Fremont N. Jaynes, who until August 1 had been the general manager of the Blue Valley Lumber Company, and who, as general manager, had effectuated the contract of purchase first mentioned. In [42]*42the contract of assignment of August 4, which will hereafter be designated the Jaynes contract, it was substantially the agreement of the. parties thereto that all of the rights of the Blue Yalley Lumber Company under the original contracts of purchase were sold and transferred to Jaynes; that the contract of assignment was not to be effectual or binding until there had been procured a release from Conro & Son in favor of the Blue Yalley Lumber 'Company of all the obligations assumed by it under its original contracts of purchase. With respect to that part of the contract which had been executed, that is, of the lumber originally contracted for which had been delivered and sold to the trade by the Blue Valley Lumber Company, it was agreed the company should account to Jaynes for all such lumber so delivered and sold at so much per thousand feet, ranging in price from $35 per thousand feet for the grades called A and B select, down to $7.50 per thousand feet for the- lower grades. Dimension stuff, shingles and lath were to be accounted for at the same prices named in the original contract of purchase with Conro & Son. For the planing-mill work it was to settle with Jaynes at the same prices mentioned in the planing-mill contract. Against these items charged to the Blue Yalley Lumber Company for lumber delivered to it and sold were to be placed the following credits: first, all moneys received by Conro & Son from all sources on account of said contracts; second, the amounts of all open accounts and bills receivable held by Conro & Son for shipments of lumber, except two accounts specifically mentioned; and third,-it was agreed that if the amount of moneys received by Conro & Son, with the amount of unpaid accounts and bills receivable held by them, were not sufficient to pay Conro & Son for the amount due them for the lumber already delivered and sold by the Blue Valley Lumber Company, and the planing-mill work done thereon, then the Blue Yalley Lumber Company, as soon as the amount of the balance could be definitely ascer[43]*43tained, would settle with Jaynes, the assignee, fox* the amount thereof in cash or good paper. With this contract of assignment it appears that Jaynes, on or about August 15, went to Conro & Son, at their place of business, and solicited a release in favor of the Blue Yalley Lumber Company, as called for by the terms of the contract of assignment. What was called a conditional release was obtained on Axxgust 15, which was given in consideration of the assignment contract being transferred to Conro & Son as collateral security, and in which they agreed to release the Blue Yalley Company fx'orn any and all liability under said original contracts “upon the said Blue Yalley Lumber Company faithfully pex-foxming and carrying oxxt the provisions of the said contract” of assignment. The Jaynes contract was assigned to Conro & Son “as collateral security to the performance of the agreement therein contained by me to be performed.” After these transactions, Conro & Son instituted suit against the Blue Yalley Lumber Company on the Jaynes contract for the balance alleged to be due them, which it was claimed was the sum of $10,447.27. In the answer of the Blue Yalley Lumber Company it is pleaded “that it has at all times and in all respects complied with said contract, so as aforesaid made on said 4th day of August, 1892, but this defendant alleges that on said 4th day of August, 1892, there was no sum due said F. N. Jaynes on account of and for said contract, but to the contrary thereof, on said 15th day of Axxgust, 1892, there was, and ever since said date has been, due, owing and unpaid from said F. N. Jaynes to this defendant the sxxm of five thousand dollars ($5,-000.00) on account of and for the adjustment of the matters set forth in and with respect to which said contract was made, and for’moneys loaned by this defendant to said F. N. Jaynes,” and judgment is prayed for in said sum of $5,000. In reply it was pleaded that as to the amount of money claimed to be due from Jaynes to defendant it does not “constitute a counter-claim, set-off or [44]*44defense to this action, and that defendant can not in this case, by reason of the nature of the contracts sued upon and the conduct of defendant in obtaining the contract and conditional release of August 15, 1892, mentioned in the petition, maintain any counter claims or set-off in this case not inherent or connected with the so-called 'Jaynes contract.’ ” On the trial of the case to the court without a jury it was found that there was due to plaintiff from the Blue Valley Lumber Company $6,649.61, with interest, making in the aggregate $8,148.09, for which judgment was rendered.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 N.W. 402, 61 Neb. 39, 1900 Neb. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blue-valley-lumber-co-v-abner-conro-son-neb-1900.