Brown v. Baird

48 P. 180, 5 Okla. 133
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 12, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 48 P. 180 (Brown v. Baird) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Baird, 48 P. 180, 5 Okla. 133 (Okla. 1897).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dale, C. J.:

November 16, 1893, L. B. Baird and J. P. McKinnis, partners doing business as the Reno Lumber company, instituted an action in the probate court of Oklahoma county, to recover a judgment against J. L. Brown in the of $59.77, balance alleged to be due upon a bill of lumber purchased and received by Brown from the Reno Lumber company. Brown answered to the action, alleging, in substance, that the lumber received by him consisted of dimension stuff, siding, flooring and shingles; that the lumber so received was not of the width and thickness which he had contracted to receive, and that the shingles were less in number than he was charged for, and in his answer alleged that the dimension stuff claimed to be two inches thick and four inches wide and of different lengths, and the siding and flooring also *135 sold as of certain width and thickness, were, in fact, not of the width and thickness claimed for them, but were short on an average of about thirty per cent., and that the shingles, which were bought in bunches and sold to him at two hundred and fifty in a bunch, had, in fact, only one hundred and fifty in each bunch. As a separate and second defense he also alleged that the Reno Lumber company had entered into a combination with the other lumber companies in Oklahoma Territory to prevent or restrain competition in the sale of lumber in this territory, but inasmuch as no proof was offered in support of this allegation, and as the questions therein involved are not raised in the brief of appellant, no further attention will be given to the second defense.

Judgment was rendered in the probate court in favor of the plaintiff therein for the full amount claimed, and an appeal taken therefrom to the district court, where a trial by jury was granted, evidence heard, and by the court a verdict was directed in favor of the Reno Lumber company in the sum of $59.77, the full amount claimed.

The entire evidence and ruling of the court upon all disputed questions of fact, together with the instructions given, as well as those offered and refused, are preserved in the record and are before us for review. From an inspection of the evidence it appears that in the fall of 1891, the plaintiff in error, J. L. Brown, contracted with the defendant in error, the Reno Lumber company, to purchase lumber for the erection of a house. That at the time of such contract a certain memorandum was made, setting forth the different items needed and fixing the prices thereof. It also appears that in payment for the material contracted for, Brown gave to the Reno *136 Lumber company two promissory notes, aggregating $280.80, which were executed by persons indebted to Brown, and which were accepted at their face value by the Reno Lumber company. After the contract was first entered into, Brown from time to time, as needed in the erection of the house, received lumber of the character heretofore mentioned, and in an amount, as claimed by the lumber company, exceeding in value the face of the notes to the extent of $59.77, which sum Brown refused to pay. At the trial Brown sought to. show that the lumber was not of the width and thickness as stated in the memorandum, and that the shingles, in number, were not ^delivered in compliance with the terms of such memorandum; also that the bill rendered and executed by the lumber company was excessive, and that the same should be for $50.93 instead of $59.77, giving to the lumber company all they could rightfully claim upon their account as rendered.

The trial court excluded all testimony offered by Brown in support of either contention and instructed the jury to return a verdict for the lumber company in the sum stated.

The plaintiff in error has filed a brief in which he alleges three propositions which, summarized, may be stated as follows:

1. The lumber having been paid for in advance by delivery of the notes, was Brown compelled to accept the customary measurement of lumber dealers, or was he entitled to lumber of the full measurements as stated in the memorandum made at the time of the contract?

2. The effect to be given to the memorandum made out at the time of the contract.

3. Did the court err in withdrawing the case from the *137 jury while there was a dispute upon the amount for which plaintiff below might recover, conceding that the defendant below was bound by their measurement?

From the evidence and record in this case we are unable to determine whether the trial court held as a matter of law that Brown was bound by the custom pf the lumber dealers in making their measurements, or whether the undisputed facts in this particular case estopped him from denying the measurements as made by the lumber company. It is' in testimony and is undisputed that Brown made no complaint until he had used the lumber in building the house, and that he was present at the yard of the company at the different times when the lumber was loaded upon wagons, and that he carefully sorted the lumber as he received it, and also that at the time he was receiving same he called the attention of one of the employes of the lumber company to the fact that the lumber did not measure in width and thickness the sizes as claimed for it and under which it was being sold. In view of such a state of facts we think there was nothing for the jury to consider upon the question of whether or not Brown was bound by the measurements as made by the lumber company and accepted by him.

The memorandum was made out upon the bill heads of the company, but was not signed by either Brown or such company, and contained no express or implied terms of warranty as to the quality of the lumber or that the same should be of full width and thickness. It was intended merely as a description of the lumber wanted. Where a memorandum does not in express terms or by clear intendment create a warranty, the courts should not give it such effect, as such a construction would *138 create a liability not in contemplation of the parties to the contract. Giving to the memorandum the effect of a mere instrument of description, we come to the question of the right of the plaintiff in error to recover upon the failure upon the part of the lumber company to furnish material of the full measurement and in the amounts purported.

It may be stated as an indisputable proposition of law that if a merchant contracts to deliver a quantity of goods or materials of a certain kind, quality or grade, he will be bound by his contract; and it was unnecessary for counsel for appellant to cite authorities in support of this proposition, but in this case we are not dealing with such a contract but with a person who purchased certain building material from a lumber company, and after having himself selected and used such material in the erection of a building, claims that he is being charged with more lumber than he received in that he is being charged for scantling of the size of 2x4 inches, which in fact only measure l-|x3-J inches; that the flooring and siding are proportionately short, and that he was charged for bunches of shingles purporting to contain two hundred and fifty each when in fact such bunches contained only one hundred and fifty each.

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Bluebook (online)
48 P. 180, 5 Okla. 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-baird-okla-1897.