Crescent Stave Co. v. Brown

205 S.W. 937, 181 Ky. 787, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 619
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 29, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 205 S.W. 937 (Crescent Stave Co. v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crescent Stave Co. v. Brown, 205 S.W. 937, 181 Ky. 787, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 619 (Ky. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Clarke

Reversing.

This action was filed by J. S. Cooper and C. L. Tarter, partners, doing business under the firm name of the Crescent Stave Company, against J. W. Brown and Riley Millard to recover damages for an alleged breach of a written contract to make and deliver whiskey and oil staves to plaintiffs, f. o. b. cars at Roxana, Kentucky, and to recover the excess of advancements, made to defendants to enable them to carry out the contract, over the value of staves which were delivered by the defendants and accepted by the plaintiffs under the contract. It is alleged in the petition that plaintiffs advanced to defendants the sum of $3,329.66, and that the value of the staves delivered under the contract was $2,899.39, and the damages from the alleged breach of contract are asserted to have been $3,036.78.

A general order of attachment was procured by plaintiffs and levied upon standing trees and culled staves located upon the tract of land known in the record as the Day tract. The defendants, by answer and. counterclaim, admitted advancements to them by plaintiffs, amounting to $3,306.01, and asserted that the [789]*789staves delivered by them and accepted by the plaintiffs were. worth $3,668.13 under the contract. Defendants also asserted claim against plaintiffs for $837.19, the alleged value of 555 whiskey staves and 35,000 oil staves which, they allege, they had manufactured and tendered to plaintiffs according to contract, and which plaintiffs wrongfully refused to accept; that plaintiffs, and not defendants, had violated the contract by removing essential parts from the stave mill which the contract obligated plaintiffs to furnish defendants, and that, after their breach of the contract, plaintiffs wrongfully entered upon the Day tract of land and cut therefrom 82 trees belonging to defendants, to their damage in the sum of $229.00. That they were further damaged in the sum of $36.00 by reason of plaintiffs stopping defendants’ team in hauling staves from the mill to Roxana; the sum of $25.00 expended by defendants in purchasing essential parts that were missing from the stave mill when received from plaintiffs, and the further sum of $50.00 for time lost while procuring these parts for the mill. Defendants also asserted a claim for $1,500.00 damages on account of being deprived by' plaintiffs’ alleged breach of the contract, of the opportunity to manufacture and deliver under the contract staves from 418 trees on the Day tract which they did not work up.

After the answer and counterclaim had been filed, in which it was alleged that the staves and stave material were deteriorating in value, an order was entered upon motion of the plaintiffs, directing the master commissioner to take charge of and sell all attached staves and material on hand that had been cut by plaintiffs and defendants from the 860 trees on the Day tract, which order the master commissioner carried out, realizing from the sale $400.00, which was paid into court. Thereafter the issues with respect to the several items above set out were completed, and'the trial before a jury resulted in a verdict for defendants for the sum of $878.00, and from the judgment entered thereon, plaintiffs have appealed.

Numerous errors are assigned as grounds for reversal, of which, however, we need notice but two, namely: (1) the court erred in admitting incompetent evidence, offered by the defendants, over objections and ex[790]*790ceptions of plaintiffs; (2) the court erred in the instructions given.

1. The. court, over- the objections and exceptions of plaintiffs, permitted the defendant, Millard, to state that a Mr. Nuckles told him that plaintiff, Cooper, had directed Nuckles to take the saw away from the stave mill furnished by plaintiffs to defendants before the completion of the contract. This was clearly hearsay evidence and incompetent, and was very prejudicial to plaintiffs because it was evidence which the jury was authorized to consider as a violation by the plaintiff, Cooper, of the contract, and was the only evidence in the record of any violation of the contract by either of the plaintiffs, and, therefore, must have been the evidence .upon which the court submitted to the jury the question of whether or not plaintiffs had violated the contract; and because of the admission of this clearly incompetent evidence and the submission to the jury, upon the basis of this evidence, of the question of whether or not plaintiffs had violated the contract, was such prejudicial error as necessitates a reversal of the judgment herein.

2. The above conclusion would render unnecessary a consideration of any of the other errors assigned as reasons for reversal were it not for the fact that, upon another trial, the other instructions given by the court upon this trial, if unnoticed, would be considered as approvedj and this fact necessitates a consideration of the other instructions which were given by the court.

The contract between the parties, after providing for the manufacture and delivery by defendants to plaintiffs of all of the staves of certain specified dimensions that could be made from 860 marked white oak trees on the Day tract of land on King’s creek, in Letcher county, and for the inspection according to the standard specifications and rules governing the sale and arbitration of white oak staves adopted by the National Coopers Association and approved by the Tight Barrel Manufacturers Association, the inspection to be made by representatives of plaintiffs whenever as many as 25,000 staves were ready for inspection, has the following provision:

“This contract is to include all the staves made from the timber herein referred to and from other timber purchased by first party (defendants) up to the number of [791]*791250.000 prime whiskey staves and as many oil staves as are made in manufacturing the prime whiskey staves, all of which are to be delivered to second party (plaintiffs) between now and January 1, 1915.”

Under this quoted provision, plaintiffs claimed that the defendants obligated themselves to furnish 250,000 whiskey staves and as many oil staves as would be made in making’ that number of whiskey staves, while the defendants claimed this clause means only that they might purchase other timber than that on the Day tract, specified in the contract, and make staves therefrom up to 250.000 whiskey staves and the resulting number of oil staves, but that it did not obligate them to furnish any staves except from the 860 trees on the Day tract and such other trees as they might purchase.

The court, evidently upon the idea that this clause of the contract was ambiguous, admitted extraneous evidence as to its meaning, and submitted to the jury its proper construction. This contract is not, in our judgment, ambiguous, but quite clearly obligated the defendants to manufacture and deliver to the plaintiffs only1 the staves that could be manufactured from the • 860 white oak trees on the Day tract of land, and such other trees as they might purchase, the total number of staves to be received by the plaintiffs not to exceed, however, 250.000 whiskey staves and the resulting oil staves, and the court should have so construed the contract, and] should not have submitted the question of its proper construction to the jury.

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244 S.W. 162 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1922)

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Bluebook (online)
205 S.W. 937, 181 Ky. 787, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 619, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crescent-stave-co-v-brown-kyctapp-1918.