Cox v. Burdett

23 Pa. Super. 346, 1903 Pa. Super. LEXIS 72
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 5, 1903
DocketAppeal, No. 70
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 23 Pa. Super. 346 (Cox v. Burdett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cox v. Burdett, 23 Pa. Super. 346, 1903 Pa. Super. LEXIS 72 (Pa. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

Opinion by

Beaveb, J.,

Replevin was brought in the court below to enforce a contract of bailment in writing, under which the plaintiffs leased to the defendants a portable sawmill and fixtures which were to be delivered to the defendants as their own property, upon the payment of the sum of $900 as in the said agreement provided. . It is not denied by the defendants that the original contract was a bailment. They allege, however, that part of the contract was an agreement on the part of the plaintiffs to “ furnish sufficient timber to keep the mill in constant operation and .... not to permit the mill to remain idle for more than twenty days at a time,” and that this was written at the time the original agreement was made, before signing, and assented to by all the parties, but that the signatures were placed above this part of the agreement, because the [349]*349place for the signatures had been arranged before it was added. The defendants also allege that subsequently, after default in furnishing timber for the mill, in accordance with this contract, they had an interview with one of the plaintiffs, in which, after visiting the scrivener and examining the contract, he admitted that he had violated the terms of the agreement and told them to take the mill and do the best they could with it. There was a difference in the recollection of the witnesses as to what passed in the conversation between them after the examination of the agreement. The difference between them was radical and could only be determined by a jury in passing upon the credibility of the parties respectively.

Two questions of fact, therefore, were very prominent in the case. Was the addition or supplement, made as alleged by the defendants at the time the original was executed, a part of the agreement? and, if so, was the abrogation of the agreement, in the subsequent arrangement between the parties, actually made, as claimed by the defendants? These facts were fairly submitted to the jury and, both of them having been found in favor of the defendants, it is easy to dispose of all of the assignments of error.

The plaintiffs misconceive the object of the defendants in offering the written addition to the agreement. It was not an offer to contradict or change in any way a written agreement by. parol. It was simply an effort to prove that the addition was part of the original agreement and, notwithstanding the fact that the signatures were above it, that it was as much a part of the agreement as though it was above the signatures. It did not, therefore, come under the rule which prevails in an effort to change or modify a written agreement by parol, except, perhaps, as to the quantity and quality of the proof required to establish the fact of the addition. Neither fraud nor accident was alleged but, if the defendants were to be believed, there was a mistake in having the signatures put above the addition instead of below it, a mistake into which the scrivener fell and in which all the parties to the agreement joined by his direction. There was no error on the part of the court in admitting the testimony relating to this part of the written agreement or in the instructions as to the questions which grew out of it. In view of this part of the contract, it [350]*350was entirely competent for the defendants to show that it had not been complied with and that, in consequence of the noncompliance of the plaintiffs, the subsequent arrangement, by which the mill was delivered to them, was made.

The letter, the admission of which is complained of in the fourth assignment of error, was admissible, if for no other purpose, as tending to show that the defendants’ contention in regard to the arrangement by which the mill had been turned over to them, as their own property, by the plaintiff, was true, inasmuch as in that letter it is spoken of as “ your mill.”

We think, therefore, that the testimony, as to the admission of which error is alleged in the first six assignments of error, was all properly admitted.

We can find nothing erroneous in the charge of the court, of which the plaintiffs have any right to complain. In the general summing up of the court, as assigned for error in the eleventh assignment, the trial judge said : “ There are four points in this case. What is the contract? Is it that portion of the writing which is wholly above the signatures or is it all of the writing, that above and that below the signatures ? That is the first point. Second. Was there a default on the part of the plaintiff in supplying timber and did that default continue from about August 10, to the latter part of December or January 1, 1896 ? If there was a default, then, third, did that throw the defendants idle and could they, if lumber had been furnished them, so that they could have run their mill constantly or nearly so, under the terms of the contract, have earned sufficient money from August to December to have paid the balance of two hundred and forty dollars on the contract? If you find all of those facts in favor of the defendant, then the defendant would be entitled to a verdict, up to that point. If you do not find these facts in favor of the defendants, they would not be entitled to a verdict. In the fourth place, what was the contract that was made in October, 1899, on this tract of timber in Lawrence county ? If it was as the defendants say, it would not change their status from what it was in December, 1896 ; but, if it was as the plaintiff says, it would, and the defendants would be required to saw out sufficient timber which at one dollar per thousand feet would have realized the two hundred and forty some odd dollars then owing. As you find these [351]*351facts, you will find for the plaintiff or the defendant.” This did the plaintiffs no harm. The defendants could have complained of it, if the verdict had been the other way, as leaving out one of the principal points in the case, namely, was the original agreement of bailment, after the plaintiffs’ failure to supply timber for sawing, canceled, as testified to by the defendants, and was the mill delivered to them in pursuance of that cancelation? As the verdict was rendered, this, of course, makes but little practical difference now. The plaintiffs seem to ignore entirely this phase of the case and hence the assignments of error to the refusal of the court to answer their points, as complained of. That question of fact was one of the prominent features of the case and could not be ignored and, in view of it, it would have been error for the court to say, as the plaintiffs requested the trial judge to say, that.the title was in the plaintiff.

We are not disposed to find fault with the verdict, except as to the amount. Both in the admission of evidence and in the charge of the court, we think the court held the rule as to damages rather strictly against the defendants. Whilst it is true that there is no set-off in replevin, it is, nevertheless, true that the conduct of the plaintiff, if it be oppressive or has in it the elements of hardship, vexation or outrage, may be taken into account by the jury in fixing the amount of damages. The court held that exemplary damages could not be awarded, unless the replevin was sued out fraudulently and without color of right. This is hardly in accord with the general rule recognized by our Supreme Court. In McDonald v. Scaife, 11 Pa. 381, Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 Pa. Super. 346, 1903 Pa. Super. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cox-v-burdett-pasuperct-1903.