Browning v. D. E. Hewitt Lumber Co.

107 S.E. 413, 88 W. Va. 626, 1921 W. Va. LEXIS 124
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 10, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 107 S.E. 413 (Browning v. D. E. Hewitt Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Browning v. D. E. Hewitt Lumber Co., 107 S.E. 413, 88 W. Va. 626, 1921 W. Va. LEXIS 124 (W. Va. 1921).

Opinion

Lynch, Judge :

Plaintiff sued in assumpsit on the common counts to recover compensation for timber cut and slipped by him for defendant, a lumber corporation, on land described as being on the left band side of Henry’s Branch below Salt Log Fork in Logan County, and the verdict and judgment gave him the amount of his claim less a store account chargeable to and charged against him on the books of the company.

The rate of compensation agreed upon by the parties was $2.75 per each thousand feet, board measure, at the mill operated by the defendant on or near the land where the timber grew, by plaintiff estimated to contain not to exceed 50 acres. The trees included within the terms of the contract were to be 16 inches and over at the butt. Plaintiff did not complete the contract, and his voluntary abandonment of the work to be performed constitutes the first ground of assignment by defendant for reversal of the judgment. If, [628]*628as defendant interprets the contract and offered evidence to prove, plaintiff agreed to 'cut and slip all the trees on the boundary for the stipuluated price, and failed to comply with the contract in that particular, he cannot recover in the action without one or more special counts, according to the common law rules obtaining in this and other states. But if, as he insists and also offered evidence to show, he undertook to perform and diligently prosecuted the work of severance only on the condition that he could abandon it if at any- time he should discover his inability to earn profitable wages during its prosecution, he may maintain the action upon the common counts. As there is evidence sufficient to warrant a verdict in accordance with either theory, the jury could, as they did, find for the plaintiff; and of this result defendant cannot complain.

The trees cut and slipped pursuant to the terms of the contract were removed from the land during the progress of the work and after its abandonment by the plaintiff, without being measured properly, as he contends, at the mill, as required by the contract, and if measured, the correct quantity was not communicated to him, as it should have been, or his trees were so mixed or confused with other trees cut by the defendant on the boundary or elsewhere that he was unable to ascertain the exact quantity of lumber for which defendant should render unto him just compensation for the labor performed by him. Wherefore he was compelled to adopt some other method than that prescribed by the contract for the ascertainment of the approximate quantity as the basis of the recovery sought in the action.

The process or method by which plaintiff undertook to overcome the effect of the omission, apparently due to his own negligence or indifference to the preservation of his rights under the contract, and his failure to measure the lumber immediately after his abandonment of the work, when the quantity could have been ascertained with greater ease and accuracy, was this: A count of the stumps of the trees, in part personally identified by him as those he cut during the progress of the operation, amounting to 1,103, and the lengths of ten of the larger and ten of the smaller sizes by [629]*629measurements on the ground where they fell, and the diameters of each of the twenty, and from this data determined, according to Scribner’s Rules for log measurement, what he deemed to be a fair average of the whole number of trees on the boundary and the aggregate quantity in all of them. In this manner he ascertained the gross board feet to be 986,082 claimed to have been severed by him, the quantity evidently accepted and approved by the jury in its computation of the quantum of damage he was entitled to, less the store account. Or, as so reduced, the verdict and judgment for plaintiff was for $2,211.17, the gross amount being $2,711.72.'

The correctness and ultimate result of this process defendant seriously questions. In order to test the accuracy of the appraisement several factors are to be considered. Among these are (1) the acreage in the boundary, not determined by a survey but by an estimate made by and at the instance of plaintiff and of others acting in his behalf; (2) the fact there was not on the boundary poplar, pine, hemlock or walnut trees, usually yielding the greater quantity of lumber, according to the general belief among experienced timber dealers, these or such of them as the land produced having been removed some 35 or 40 years before the date of the contract; (3) the questionable accuracy of the stumpage plan used and of the aggregate quantity of board feet of lumber, as computed in the manner indicated; (4) the discrepancy between the quantities found by plaintiff and defendant respectively, the stumpage count of the latter and the mill measurements of the trees, as provided for in the contract, being less than half the quantity of lumber found by plaintiff.

A just and reasonable valuation or appraisement of the data detailed is essential upon this review, for without them it is difficult to determine the merits of the controversy. These facts are developed only partially by the testimony. Nevertheless, the principal argument of counsel is based upon them and this discussion necessarily must deal with them in the most practical way. It will not do to say merely that these were all matters for the jury to consider and determine, [630]*630and that as they have performed that duty this court is powerless to interfere with their verdict, the evidence before them being in conflict. The general rule is as stated, but whether the evidence is or is not conflicting, there is not such virtue or integrity in the judgment of twelve men, however honest and considerate they may be, as forbids investigation and disapproval by an appellate court if an apparent injustice has been done. This court will exercise the authority vested in it to correct so far as possible errors committed on the trial of any case when its facts and circumstances do not warrant the finding. The only question to be dealt with now, therefore, is whether the judgment reviewed is just or unjust in any reasonable aspect or view of the facts and circumstances proved and detailed.

If, while engaged in the operation, plaintiff cut 1,103 trees and defendant afterwards cut 95 more on the same boundary, although plaintiff undertook to prove that only about 50 remained on it when he quit, it produced approximately 1,200 trees, apparently an extraordinary yield even from a virgin forest composed only of beech, sugar and oak above 16 inches in diameter at the butt. But this tract was not a virgin forest and did not contain timber of the highest productive capacity. Nothing appears as to the fértility of the soil except in the brief of counsel for the plaintiff. There is found in the record no proof on the subject, and there is the same want or absence of information sufficient to serve -as the basis of a comparison with the productive capacity of the tract in this particular. It is suggested that a Logan County jury could, presumably without proof, determine for itself the timber yield on the boundary, although so far as disclosed no juror saw the tract. Upon that suggestion comment is not necessary.

Again, if it be true, as plaintiff contends and essayed to prove, that the trees cut by him were 1,103 and the yield from that number was 986,082 board feet, then the acre average was 22 trees and the qualitative average of the total number was 894 board feet. Apparently that amount is excessive, if the general estimate of experienced timbermen is even [631]

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Workman v. Clear Fork Lumber Co.
163 S.E. 14 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1932)

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Bluebook (online)
107 S.E. 413, 88 W. Va. 626, 1921 W. Va. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/browning-v-d-e-hewitt-lumber-co-wva-1921.