Cub Fork Coal Co. v. Fairmont Glass Co.

19 F.2d 273, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2224
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 27, 1927
Docket3838
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 19 F.2d 273 (Cub Fork Coal Co. v. Fairmont Glass Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cub Fork Coal Co. v. Fairmont Glass Co., 19 F.2d 273, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2224 (7th Cir. 1927).

Opinion

EVANS, Circuit Judge.

This action was one for damages for alleged breach of contract. A judgment for defendant followed the rendition of a general verdict in its favor.

Plaintiff sold defendant 17,500 tons of coal to be delivered — 1,000 tons the first month (July), and 1,500 tons each month for the succeeding 11 months. The coal was to be “paragon or Cub Fork egg. In ease shipper is unable for any reason to deliver the full tonnage in egg size, mine run will be accepted.” Deliveries were “subject to strikes, accidents, car supply, federal and state regulations, constraint of law, and other causes beyond our control.” It was further provided that “the material shall be shipped ■* * * in so far as the labor and the ability of the carriers will permit.”

It was alleged in the complaint that the shortage in deliveries which occurred during certain months (July, August, and October) was due to plaintiffs’ inability to get ears; that “during the period aforesaid, upon the Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad, the only common carrier transporting coal from the said mines, there existed and continued a great deficiency in coal ears,” etc. After the contract had been in force for about 5y.¿ months, defendant wired plaintiffs: “Stop all shipments to us until further notice. See letter.” In the letter defendant .called plaintiffs’ attention to their failure to ship the specified amounts of coal and complained of the quality delivered. It also demanded a reduction in price and notified plaintiffs to make no further shipments.

All the coal shipped up to this time had been accepted and paid for.

While further negotiations were had, both parties refused to yield from the positions by them taken, and this litigation followed. That is to say, plaintiffs refused to reduce their price, insisted that the coal delivered was of the grade specified, and that their failure'to ship the designated quantity was due to ear shortage. Defendant refused to accept more coal unless the price was reduced, and insisted that it had been obliged to purchase coal elsewhere. Thus it will be seen that one of the contested issues on the trial arose over plaintiffs’ failure to ship 1,500 tons for each of certain months.'

Error is assigned over the rejection of evidence offered by the plaintiffs tending to establish a car shortage. One Hodges who described himself as “the statistician in charge of coal ear accounts” of the Chesapeake & Ohio railroad, testified that his company published monthly bulletins showing the allotment of cars to coal companies for the succeeding 30 days. This allotment was based upon the affidavits of the shippers and represented the latter’s requirements. From the records before him, he tes *274 tified to the plaintiffs’ allotments. He was then asked to state the number of ears furnished during the months wherein plaintiffs failed to ship defendant the 1,500 tons of coal. The objection to this question was sustained, but not until the witness had testified that the record which he had in his possession was made up in his office, and was based upon reports sent Mm, in the due course of business, by one Malley, an employee of the railway whose position was described as “a local ear distributor.” Mal-ley sent daily reports, which showed the “ratings of the mines, cars, orders, supplies, loadings, hours worked and ears billed east and west.” These daily reports were preserved and on file with the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Company. In the due course of business the reports were transferred into permanent book form, and the witness had this record, but not the daily mine reports, in court.

The materiality of this evidence is not denied. Defendant, however, questioned its competency, and on this ground the court excluded it. The rules governing the admissibility of evidence of this character have of necessity changed somewhat with the changing methods and growth of business houses. The definition of a book of original entry is doubtless more inclusive today than it was a century ago. Yet we doubt whether, had the complexity and size of modem business transactions existed then, the more restricted definitions would have been pronounced. In other words, the courts made the exception fit the existing needs. At first they were dealing with a situation where the number of employers was few, the transactions simple, and the field of business activity limited. It was not so difficult, at leást not impossible, to secure the best evidence — the testimony of an employee who conducted the entire transaction. With the increase in the territorial range of business as well as in the number of employees, the difficulty of producing all the witnesses who could give first hand information increased. In some instances, these .obstacles became insurmountable. It was this situation which led to what is generally called an exception to the rule excluding hearsay evidence. But, in creating the exception, the court so far as possible safeguarded the litigants from the dangers incident to the reception of hearsay evidence.

The same reason that called for the exception, to wit, necessity, led courts later to free the rule of some of its earlier restrictions. Wisconsin Steel Co. v. Maryland Steel Co. (C. C. A.) 203 F. 403; Givens v. Pierson’s Adm’x, 167 Ky. 574, 181 S. W. 324, Ann. Cas. 1917C, 956; Squires v. O’Connell, 91 Vt. 35, 99 A. 268; Morse Dry Dock & Co. v. Susquehanna S. S. Co. (C. C. A.) 289 F. 436; E. I. Du Pont De Nemours & Co. v. Tomlinson (C. C. A.) 296 F. 634; Banner Grain Co. v. Burr Farmers’ Elevator & Supply Co., 162 Minn. 334, 202 N. W. 740; Cascade Lumber Co. v. Ætna Indemnity Co., 56 Wash. 503, 106 P. 158; Barclay v. Deyerle, 53 Tex. Civ. App. 236, 116 S. W. 123. Jones in his work on Evidence, volume 3, p'. 569, announces the rules as follows :

“The former strict idea of what constituted original entries has been modified to fit the necessities of new business conditions. Inasmuch as under the modem methods of extensive business houses the information relative to the transactions constituting the accounts must pass through various hands before being permanently recorded, some system of temporary memoranda preparatory to the permanent records is necessary to insure convenience as well as accuracy. It would be impracticable to preserve for any great length of time the tags, slips, or tokens constituting such original memoran-da, and impossible, in view of the changing of employees, to obtain the testimony of the person who made the temporary memoranda or conducted the transaction. Hence, following the rule of necessity, the courts do not regard such temporary memoranda as the originals, but look to the permanent records as such original entries when properly verified by a suppletory oath. In this particular, every ease must be made to depend very much upon its own peculiar circumstances, having regard to the situation of the parties, the kind of business, the mode of conducting it, and the time and manner of making entries.”

To bring the evidence within the exception (relevancy being shown) there must appear (a) practical necessity for its introduction; and (b) circumstantial guaranty that the transaction occurred as recorded.

In the present ease, there is little or no question respecting the circumstantial guaranty that the transaction occurred as recorded.

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Bluebook (online)
19 F.2d 273, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cub-fork-coal-co-v-fairmont-glass-co-ca7-1927.