Burgess Sulphite Fibre Co. v. Drew

157 F. 212, 84 C.C.A. 660, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4800
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedNovember 21, 1907
DocketNo. 687
StatusPublished

This text of 157 F. 212 (Burgess Sulphite Fibre Co. v. Drew) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burgess Sulphite Fibre Co. v. Drew, 157 F. 212, 84 C.C.A. 660, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4800 (1st Cir. 1907).

Opinion

PUTNAM, Circuit Judge.

Throughout this opinion we will speak of the plaintiffs below, now the defendants in error, as the plaintiffs, and of the defendants below, now the plaintiffs in error, as the defendants. There -was a verdict for the plaintiffs, and judgment thereon; and the defendants took out this writ of error. It should be observed that Burgess, one of the defendants, who represented the other defendant, has been treated in the record as standing for both defendants; so that where his name is used it is to be accepted as meaning both himself and the corporation which he represented, and vice versa. The facts, as stated from the standpoint of the plaintiffs, are as follows:

“In 1900, one E. O. Goodhue had contracted to sell and deliver to one of the defendants, the Burgess Sulphite Fibre Company, a large quantity of pulp wood from the towns of Canaan and Averill, Vt. This pulp wood had been hauled and landed on the Willard stream, a tributary of the Connecticut river in Vermont, and was to be run down Willard stream into the Connecticut river, [213]*213.and finally delivered to the Burgess Company in Berlin, N. II. The plaintiffs had furnished Goodhue labor and supplies for his operations in cutting and hauling this wood to the amount of nearly $3,000, which he had failed to pay. When the spring freshets came on, and the parties had begun to run the wood down Willard stream into the Connecticut river, the plaintiffs brought suit against Goodhue; attached this wood on Willard stream, and the attaching sheriff threw a boom across the stream, stopped the wood by actual manual seizure, and held it completely within his control. Copies of the writ and sheriff’s returns were also immediately filed in the offices of the town clerks in the towns where the wood was held. A few hours after this attachment and seizure of the wood, Mr. Burgess, one of the defendants and mortgagee of the wood, called up one of the plaintiffs by telephone, and told him if they would let the wood go they (the defendants) would pay the plaintiffs’ claim for the supplies and labor furnished Goodhue, as soon as the sum due was ascertained or agreed upon. Relying on this promise and agreement, plaintiffs told the keeper to open the boom and let the wood go, which was done; and they also directed the sheriff to release the attachment. The suit against Goodhue was contested, but judgment for plaintiffs was obtained for the full amount claimed. Defendants were afterwards notified of the judgment, and payment was demanded. Payment not being made, this suit was brought against the defendants on their alleged contract.”

The facts as given by the defendant do not materially differ except on the question of the nature of the promise given the plaintiffs on which the present suit was brought. The attachment was made generally, and also particularly for the purpose of enforcing an alleged lien under the statutes of Vermont on the property attached. The defendants maintain that the only promise given was what was testified to by Burgess, to the effect that, if Warren E. Drew, one of the plaintiffs, would bring a lien receipt to Berlin, he (Burgess) would sign it if he (Drew) would release the pulp wood. This was over the telephone. As to the nature of the promise the parties were squarely at issue, and this issue turned on the testimony of Warren E. Drew and Burgess as to this conversation over the telephone, without either having any direct support from other proofs as to what was the true version.

There is no question that, immediately after the conversion between Burgess and Drew, the attaching officer released possession of the logs, and that they floated into New Hampshire, and came into the hands of the defendants, and were disposed of by them.

The writ against Goodhue contained the following directions:

“And you are also further commanded to attach all the logs, limber, and pulp wood now in Willard stream in the towns of Canaan and Lemington in said county of Essex, in order to preserve and secure the plaintiffs’ lien thereon for the indebtedness set forth in the writ of services in hauling and driving said lumber, timber, and pulp wood.”

There seems to be no substantial question on the proposition that the deputy sheriff made the proper returns to the various officers of the town clerks in the towns in which were situated the property attached, in accordance with the statutes of Vermont in regard to effectuating liens; and the same is true on the proposition that those returns, together with the order of the writ which we have quoted, were in due form to effectuate a lien under those laws. All these facts are to be kept in mind in considering the defendants’ assignment of alleged errors.

[214]*214Immediately after the logs were released, or perhaps so near thereto that the occurrence might be said to have been simultaneous therewith, a receipt was given to the deputy sheriff by the defendants as follows:

“Canaan, Vermont, June 2nd, 1900.
“Received from Carlisle N. Green,1 deputy sheriff of Essex County, Vermont, about 1,000 cords of pulp wood of the value of six thousand dollars which was attached by said Carlisle N. Green, on a writ in favor of W. E. and J. W. Drew, to enforce and preserve their lien for labor in hauling and driving said logs and pulp wood, which logs and pulp wood we hereby agree to account for to said sheriff to answer any execution which the said plaintiff may recover in their said suit. Burgess Sulphite Fibre Cc.,
“By T. P. Burgess, Treas.”

There is, apparently, no substantial question that, in Vermont, in a suit brought on this receipt, the receiptor might have shown that the plaintiffs had no lien claim, or that the lien claim was subject to the mortgage, if there was one; so that, in a suit on the receipt, the plaintiffs might have recovered nothing, or perhaps a portion of their debt-only pro tanto, according to the facts as they actually existed. Therefore, there may be a broad distinction between the promise alleged 'by the plaintiffs to have been made by Burgess and a promise to give a receipt; so that the question whether, under the laws of Vermont, the plaintiffs had an absolute lien on the property attached as against an alleged mortgage, or no lien at all, was an essential element in determining the probabilities whether the defendants agreed absolutely to pay the debt due the plaintiffs from Goodhue, or only promised to give a receipt which would secure to them possession of the logs, and postpone all substantial questions for future determination. Therefore, the relations of the laws of Vermont to the existing circumstances constituted an important element in enabling the jury to ascertain what the probabilities were in regard to the conflicting versions of the conversation between Drew and Burgess.

The statute giving liens of the class involved here is found in section 2282 and sequence of the Vermont Statutes 1894, of which section 2282 is as follows:

“Sec. 2282. A person cutting or drawing logs shall have a lien thereon for his wages which shall take precedence of other claims except public taxes, and continue sixty days, after the services are performed.

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Related

Quimby v. Hazen
54 Vt. 132 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1881)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
157 F. 212, 84 C.C.A. 660, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4800, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burgess-sulphite-fibre-co-v-drew-ca1-1907.