Chase v. Blodgett Milling Co.

87 N.W. 826, 111 Wis. 655, 1901 Wisc. LEXIS 76
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 5, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 87 N.W. 826 (Chase v. Blodgett Milling Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chase v. Blodgett Milling Co., 87 N.W. 826, 111 Wis. 655, 1901 Wisc. LEXIS 76 (Wis. 1901).

Opinion

Cassoday, C. J.

This is an action to recover damages, as •alleged, for failure to shell a quantity of corn in a good, careful, and workmanlike manner so as to be in a suitable condition to be popped, and to do the work of shelling as well as any one could do it for that purpose, as agreed; that the defendant received the corn and undertook to shell the same, pursuant to such agreement, for the purposes aforesaid, and did actually shell the same, but in such a careless, negligent, and unskilful and unworkmanlike manner that the kernels were so cracked, crushed, and broken as to be entirely unfit for the purpose mentioned, and by such shelling became entirely worthless except for feed. The answer is a general denial. At the close of the trial the jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, and assessed his damages at $32. From the judgment entered thereon the defendant appeals.

• The evidence on the part of the plaintiff tends to prove the contract so alleged in the complaint, and the breach of the same by the defendant, and that the corn so shelled was shipped to Chicago and returned, and that not more than one eighth of the same would pop.

1. Error is assigned because the court admitted evidence tending to prove that corn taken from the same crib, and raised the same year, and in the same condition, had been shelled by other parties in good, condition for popping, by automatic cornshellers,— one of them being of the same construction, and working upon the same principle, as the defendant’s cornsheller in question; and that the corn so shelled by such other persons had also been shipped to Chicago, but had not been returned. ¥e perceive no error in such rulings. It seems to have been an appropriate way of proving that the corn so delivered to and shelled bjr the defendant was in a suitable condition to be shelled, with proper care, so that the same could be popped. It was also proper to identify and distinguish the corn so [658]*658sbellecl by the defendant and shipped to Chicago, from the corn so shelled by such other persons and shipped to Chicago. What has been said covers the second assignment of error — for admitting evidence tending to prove that the corn so shelled by such other persons popped well.

2. The defendant’s foreman, Yarger, testified that the plaintiff did not say in his presence or hearing: For God’s sake, don’t smash my corn, or it won’t be worth a dollar to me!” nor anything in substance like that. The plaintiff testified to the effect that he so remarked to the defendant’s foreman when he first came into the mill, upon examining a bag partly full, which Yarger told him was feed that came down from the corn they had been grinding. The plaintiff’s witness Brown testified that the bag so referred to by the plaintiff contained “ cleanings of the elevator that had come down ahead of the corn ” of the plaintiff, and his witness Kinney testified to the effect that he heard the plaintiff make such remark to the defendant’s foreman. Error is assigned because the court refused to allow such foreman to testify whether, standing where they did, Kinney could have heard such remark with the machinery in motion, or if made in an ordinary conversation, or at all. We perceive no error in such rulings. The defendant’s foreman and another witness had both fully testified in regard to the amount of noise and the difficulty of hearing in the mill. The question whether Kinney could or could not have heard such remark was for the jury, under the circumstances in evidence.

3. Error is assigned because the court refused to allow the •defendant’s foreman, after being recalled, to testify as to how the rollers were adjusted before he adjusted them in the plaintiff’s presence at the time of beginning the work on the corn in question. The witness had just before testified that when the plaintiff came the rollers were closed, and that they then began to open them. He had testified [659]*659before be was recalled that tbe first thing he did after the plaintiff came, and when he “got into the mill, was to open the feed rolls; ” and that he then turned the “ hand wheels ” as far as possible, with the help of the witness Carney; and that the rollers were wide open enough to allow corn to pass through without being affected by the rollers; that they were three eighths of an inch apart. ¥e perceive no reversible error in such ruling. The plaintiff does not contend that the rollers were not so closed when the foreman first began to so turn the screws, but insists that, if he then opened them as wide as he could, then when he subsequently changed them he must have narrowed the opening through which the corn had to pass. There is evidence tending to prove that the screws had been changed after a portion of the corn had been shelled.

4. Error is assigned because the court refused to grant a ■nonsuit or to direct a verdict in favor of the defendant. There is dispute about the condition of the corn. The plaintiff contends that, although the defendant disclaimed any experience in shelling corn for the purpose of popping, yet it claimed that it could do so as well as the persons named, who had previously shelled corn for such purpose for the plaintiff; and that the defendant directed the plaintiff'to bring on his corn to be shelled by the defendant. The defendant disclaimed any experience in shelling corn for the purpose of popping, and claimed that it had never advertised or given the public to understand that it was engaged in ■shelling corn for such purpose; but that its machinery was proper for shelling corn, and had been used for that purpose for several years. The defendant’s foreman testified substantially to the same facts, and also that when they had weighed one wagon load of the plaintiff’s corn they dumped it down, and put a portion of the corn in, so as to see if they were able to get the corn through the roller and cleaner and feed mill into the bag in a satisfactory condition to the [660]*660plaintiff; that, after a part of it was so put through, they examined it, and the plaintiff told them to go ahead and put the rest of it through, and that as far as he could see the shelling was satisfactory, and to go ahead and dump it and get through with it. Such different claims and contentions were questions of fact for the jury. There appears to be sufficient evidence to sustain the verdict. This being so, we would not be justified in disturbing it.

5. Error is assigned because the trial court instructed the jury that “ when the defendant company undertook to shell the corn, it was its duty to use ordinary care in the shelling; and by the term £ ordinary care ’ I mean such care as a person of ordinary prudence and skill would usually exercise under the circumstances.” And again, that “ if you are unable to say, after a fair and impartial consideration of the evidence in the case, under the instruction of the court, whether or not the corn was injured by the defendant in the shelling, so that'it would not pop, by the failure' of the defendant to exercise ordinary care, as hereinbefore defined, then the plaintiff cannot recover, because, as I have said, the burden of proof is upon the plaintiff to satisfy you, by a preponderance of the evidence, that it was so injured.” The only criticism upon such portions of the charge is that they “ fixed the criterion of ordinary care upon a person, instead of upon the mass or majority of people.” In support of such contention counsel cite Duthiev. Washburn, 87 Wis. 233, and

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 N.W. 826, 111 Wis. 655, 1901 Wisc. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chase-v-blodgett-milling-co-wis-1901.