Daniels v. Little

19 Ind. 305
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 19 Ind. 305 (Daniels v. Little) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daniels v. Little, 19 Ind. 305 (Ind. 1862).

Opinion

Hanna, J.

Suit to recover damages for the non-fulfillment of a contract, as follows :

“Memorandum, etc., made this 25th day of November, 1857, by Burns 8? Daniels, of the first part, and Little ¡8¡¡ Co., of the second part, witnesseth : that the parties of the first part, agree to furnish and deliver, to said party of the second part, at the depot of the Toledo, etc., road, one hundred barrels flour, of an extra quality, etc.; and more, to the amount of five hundred barrels, if said Little &¡ Co. should wish; and in consideration, etc., said parties of the second part, agree to advance said Daniels Bums money, from [306]*306time to time, to purchase wheat, for the purpose of making said flour. The wheat, so purchased, to be paid for at the same price paid at Peru, or lower if possible, and for every five bushels, so bought, the said D. § B. are to deliver one barrel of flour as agreed, said Little § Go. to pay for hauling said flour to Peru, at a sum not exceeding one shilling per barrel; said flour to be delivered as fast as made, and all to be delivered by the first day of January, 1858, and D. ‡ B. hereby acknowledge the receipt of two hundred dollars, as an advance on said contract.”

The breach charged, was, that Daniels $ Burns failed to deliver at, etc., the one hundred barrels of flour, or any part thereof, and have also failed to repay said two hundred dollars, and the interest thereon.

Answer. 1. Denial. 2. That the plaintiff, before the time had expired for the delivery, etc., demanded, and the defendants repaid, said sum advanced, and interest thereon, in full settlement, etc. 3. That the defendants were, on, etc., at, etc., the owners of a mill, at which wheat was to be purchased, and said flour was to be manufactured; that, from the time of making said contract, until the first of January, when, etc., owing to high waters and the impassable condition of the roads leading to said mill, they were unable to purchase wheat, at Peru prices, out of which to manufacture flour; and that the market price, at said mills, was, during, etc., five cents per bushel higher than at Peru; and that they repaid said sum, etc. 4. Avers a demand of the money advanced, on the 10th day of January, 1858, and the repayment thereof, and five dollars interest, and that thereby said contract became rescinded.

Reply. General denial to the whole answer; and, second, as to the third paragraph, that on the 15th of December, 1857, the defendants had in their possession five hundred bushels of wheat, purchased with the money of the plain[307]*307tiffs, with which they might have made one hundred barrels of flour, etc., but that they failed, etc.

Trial; general verdict for the plaintiffs, and finding on special interrogatories. Questions are made upon the ruling, upon the admission of, and refusal to admit, evidence, and upon instructions given and refused.

The Court refused to permit the defendants to introduce evidence to sustain the third paragraph of their answer. This ruling involves the construction that should be given to the agreement. As the plaintiffs were to have a barrel of flour for every five bushels of wheat purchased, and were to furnish the money to buy the wheat, it was, of course, to their interest to procure it at as low a rate as possible. They might have fixed the precise rate, beyond which the defendants were not permitted to go. They did not do so in figures, but agreed that a greater price, or sum, than was paid at Peru, should not be paid by the defendants at their mills, which, the answer shows, were six miles from that point.

It is urged, that this provision in the agreement should not be construed as forbidding the defendants from purchasing, on account of the plaintiffs, but merely as limiting the price at which the plaintiffs were to furnish money, namely, Peru prices, and that the defendants assumed the risk of procuring the article at that price. If they could not, it would be their loss, but could not excuse them from performing. We do not think this is the proper construction, or legal effect, of the agreement. In other words, we think the third paragraph of the answer was valid, and, as a consequence, evidence should have been received to sustain, it. The language used is, that “ the wheat, so purchased, to be paid for at the same price paid at Peru, or lower if possible.” Whatever might have been the construction of this sentence, without the latter branch, it is certainly shown by that portion of it, that the defendants were the persons who were to make the purchases, at the Peru price, or lower if [308]*308possible. This being so, it operated as a limitation upon them, and they were not permitted to go beyond it, at the expense of the plaintiffs, and, we suppose, could not be compelled to, at their own expense, as it does not appear that they were to furnish any of the money to malee the purchases with.

The trial, in this case, came off on the 8th day of March, 1861. The defendants introduced one of the plaintiffs as a witness, and asked him the following question: “ State whether, about the 1st of January, 1858, or soon after that time, you did not call on the defendants, and demand the repayment of the two hundred dollars you had advanced to the defendants on the contract?” The witness answered*: “Some time, I think, in February or March, 1858, I called on the defendants, and demanded the money I had advanced them. They paid me two hundred dollars I had advanced them. This was in my warehouse, on the canal, in Peru, and was paid by Daniels, and was two hundred dollars, and no more, we retaining our right for damages.”

The plaintiffs then asked the same witness this question, which was answered, over the defendants’ objection, as follows : “ State whether or not, at the time of the contract with the defendants, you had a contract for the sale of the same flour in the State of Maine, and if so, whether you informed the defendants of that fact or not ? ” Answer: “ I had a contract for the sale of the flour I was to receive from the defendants, in the State of Maine, for nine dollars and a half per barrel. I told the defendants, at the time of making the contract, I had the flour contracted. Do not recollect whether I told them where. Did not tell them what price. I told them to fix the longest time for the delivery of it, and not disappoint me. Wheat was worth, in June, when the contract was made, about sixty cents a bushel, and on the 1st of January, 1858, about sixty-five cents. I have been a miller, and have made a barrel of flour [309]*309out of four bushels and fifteen pounds of good whéat. It ordinarily takes four bushels and a half to make a barrel of flour. Do n’t know the cost of shipping a barrel of flour from Peru to the State of Maine; at that time, freight was very high. I think it could not have been more than one dollar and seventy-five cents a barrel.”

Was this testimony responsive to the inquiry put to the witness ? 2 R. S., p. 96; if it was not, then the Court erred in the next ruling, which was against permitting the defendant, Daniels, to testify as to the payment of said two hundred dollars and interest, and the understanding, at the time of the payment, relative to the sum being in full, and intended to close up the matter between the parties.

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59 N.E. 347 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1901)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 Ind. 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniels-v-little-ind-1862.