Cudlipp v. C. R. Cummings Export Co.

149 S.W. 444, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 924
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 1, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 149 S.W. 444 (Cudlipp v. C. R. Cummings Export Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cudlipp v. C. R. Cummings Export Co., 149 S.W. 444, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 924 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

REESE, J.

George Cudlipp instituted this action against the C. R. Cummings Export Company to recover $1,396.38, alleged to be the balance due on certain ash and cottonwood logs delivered by plaintiff to defendant at its boom at Wallisville on the Trinity river, under a contract between them. The case was tried with a jury, the trial resulting in a verdict and judgment for defendants. His motion for a new trial having been overruled, plaintiff appeals.

It was alleged in the petition that appellant delivered to appellee on different dates certain ash and cottonwood logs, the number and value of which, according to the contract, are stated, the total value being $3,-171.71, and that appellee had paid him of that amount $2,183.32, leaving a balance due of $1,012.71. A further sum of $386.67 was alleged to be due under a former contract, making the aggregate indebtedness the amount sued for. The defense was that ap-pellee had paid appellant for all logs delivered under the contract referred to, except the $387.67, which had been applied upon a former indebtedness due to appellee by appellant.

The evidence shows that appellee had settled for all of the logs delivered, according to the sealing and classification of the same made by the agents and employes of appel-lee at its mill, where the logs were delivered. Appellant denied the correctness of this scaling and classification, alleging that it had been fraudulently, unfairly, and negligently made, and introduced evidence tending to show that he had put in the river to be floated down to the mill a greater number of logs than were accounted for by ap-pellee, and that some of these logs were of a better grade or classification than shown by appellee’s scale, as shown by the scale of the same made by him on the river bank, making the difference sued for. The case as it is presented on this appeal turns upon the terms of the contract with regard to the scaling of the logs, and the legal effect thereof. The terms of the contract, which was verbal, are derived entirely from appellant’s testimony. The logs were put in the river by appellant and left to float down to the boom at appellee’s mill. On arrival there they were pulled out of the river onto the skidway at the mill, and scaled and classified to determine the quantity of feet in each log, and whether first class, second *445 class, or culls, which latter were not to he taken or paid for at all. When thus sealed, the logs went into the mill, were sawed up into lumber, and shipped out. The testimony of appellant as to the contract was, in substance, that the logs were to be scaled and classified by appellee’s scalers at the mill on their arrival there, and that settlement was to be made according to the estimation and classification thus made. The sealers employed by appellee were competent and reliable men. It is not denied that settlements have been made for all logs according to the scale and classification thus made. The difference between the number of logs and grade thereof put into the river according to appellant’s scaling, and those delivered at the mill according to appellee’s scaling, is shown by the difference between the amount really due according to appellant’s claim and the amount actually paid by appellee, as shown by the amount sued for. The evidence, however, showed that in floating logs the distance these logs were floated some would sink, some would go out in “run-outs” from the river, and be lost, and some would get caught on sand banks and lie there until there was a rise in the river, and from exposure to the sun would develop cracks and other defects, and this would affect the classification or grade of the logs. Appellant testified that appellee got all the logs he put in the river, but he could give no better reason for this statement than the fact that the logs were put in the river. Appellee rendered to appellant statements from time to time. After receiving the statements of May, June, July, and August, 1907, appellant on September 20, 1907, wrote to appel-lee, complaining of the scale and grading of the logs by appellee’s scales. To this letter appellee replied on September 24th. suggesting that appellant arrange to spend two or three days at the mill where logs were delivered and measure the logs with appel-lee’s men. After this appellee kept on sending statements, and appellant made no further protest or complaint, nor did he act upon ap-pellee’s suggestion that he come to the mill and overlook the scaling. He testified that he knew appellee was relying upon the contract, which provided that his men were to scale the timber and it was to settle on their sealing, that he knew that appellee was expecting to settle with him on the basis of these scales, and that, after the logs were sawed, there was no way to recheck any of them.

[1] After instructing the jury that, according to the undisputed evidence, the contract was that the logs were to he delivered in defendant’s log boom at its mill, and were to be paid for as soon as they could be classified and scaled by defendant, according to such scale and classification, the court then charged the jury, in substance, that such scaling and classification by defendant would be binding on plaintiff, unless the jury found from a preponderance of the evidence that the difference between the quantity or classification of the logs that were in fact delivered by appellant and the quantity or classification thereof as shown by defendant's reports of such scaling and classification was so great as to raise in the mind of the jury the belief that there was bad faith, or a fraudulent purpose on the part of defendant in making said scale or classification. In short, the charge throughout embodied the principle of law that the scaling and classification made by appellee was binding on appellant, unless it was shown by appellant that there had been therein such gross mistake as to raise the belief that there was bad faith or fraudulent purpose on the part of appellee in making the scales or classification. By the charge this principle was applied, in separate paragraphs, both to the quantity and the classification as to quality of the logs. Appellant makes no objection to that part of the charge wherein the court states to the jury the terms of the contract, as shown by the undisputed evidence, but by his first and second assignments of error he assails that portion of the charge above referred to.

There was no evidence of actual fraud or bad faith further than such as might have been afforded by the great discrepancy between the quantity and grade of logs claimed by appellant to have been put in the river and that shown by the scaling and classification made and reported by appellee.

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Bluebook (online)
149 S.W. 444, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 924, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cudlipp-v-c-r-cummings-export-co-texapp-1912.