Gardner v. Mid-Continent Coal & Coke Co.

368 P.2d 204, 149 Colo. 122
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 22, 1962
DocketNo. 19,459
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 368 P.2d 204 (Gardner v. Mid-Continent Coal & Coke Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gardner v. Mid-Continent Coal & Coke Co., 368 P.2d 204, 149 Colo. 122 (Colo. 1962).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Hall.

The parties appear here in the same order as in the trial court. We refer to them as Gardner and Mid-Continent.

Gardner filed its complaint on September 4, 1958, alleging for a FIRST CLAIM that Mid-Continent, effective as of July 1, 1957, requested it to haul coal from Mid-Continent’s mine to the railhead near Carbondale, and offered to pay therefor $3.00 per ton for the first 5,000 tons hauled per month, and $2.00 per ton for all in excess of 5,000 tons per month. That pursuant to this request, Gardner hauled coal through the month of May 1958, and that there is due and unpaid for said hauling the sum of $20,465.37, for coal hauled during the first five months of 1958. For a SECOND CLAIM Gardner alleges that Mid-Continent is indebted to it in the amount of $4,662.50 as rental for equipment for the month of March 1958.

Mid-Continent filed its answer and counterclaims alleging that all coal hauled was hauled as provided by a written contract entered into between the parties on August 10, 1956, and that all amounts due have been paid; alleges not only payment but overpayment for rental of equipment, and sets forth a first counterclaim [124]*124for (1) $9,969.47 overpayment on rental of equipment, and (2) a second counterclaim for $10,000.00 for breach of the contract of August 10, 1956, in failing to haul, for the period specified in the contract, the coal produced at its mine.

Trial was to a jury, to which forms of verdicts on all claims were submitted. The jury allowed the claim of Gardner for rental of equipment. All other claims and counterclaims were denied. Judgment was entered accordingly.

Gardner is here by writ of error seeking reversal as to the denial of its claim for $20,465.37 for hauling.

Mid-Continent assigns cross-error and seeks reversal of the judgment for $4,662.50 for equipment rental. It does not question the verdicts denying its counterclaims.

Prior to August 10, 1956, Mid-Continent had been engaged in extensive development work for the purpose of opening a coal mine in Pitkin County, Colorado, located several miles from the railroad shipping point near Carbondale.

Negotiations were entered into between the parties, looking to transportation of coal to be mined from the mine tipple to the railroad shipping point.

On August 10, 1956, the parties entered into a written “Coal Haulage Contract” whereby Gardner agreed to haul coal produced from the mine to the railhead at the agreed price of $2.00 per ton. Hauling was to commence when production started and was to continue for five years.

The contract specifically provided that Gardner should haul all of the coal produced from the mine. Mid-Continent did not expressly agree to mine any coal, to continue mining for the five year period, to offer any coal for hauling or that it would mine any definite quantity of coal during any stated period of time.

The contract did provide for increases or decreases in the price per ton for hauling in the event of 5 % increases or decreases in the wages paid by Gardner to its em[125]*125ployees, and also for increases or decreases in the price for hauling in the event of increases or decreases in the cost price of new trucks to be used in hauling.

The contract also provided for renegotiation of the basic price for hauling in the event of the happening of certain events and for arbitration of certain disputes.

Production began in October 1956 and Gardner hauled all coal produced during 1956 and 1957 and the first three months of 1958, and hauled part of the coal produced during April and May 1958.

Production during 1956 and the first six months of 1957 had not reached the 500 tons per day, or approximately 10,000 tons per month, anticipated by the parties at the time they executed the haulage contract. As a result of this short production, and at the request of Gardner, the parties met and Gardner complained of losses suffered by it on the coal hauling at $2.00 per ton, which Gardner claimed were primarily caused by the low production. As an outgrowth of this meeting, Mid-Continent sent to Gardner for each of the months July, August, September, October, November and December of 1957, two voucher-type checks. Attached to each check was a voucher, a part thereof being a “remittance advice” stating that: “Your endorsement of above check constitutes a receipt in full for account as stated below. No other receipt necessary. If incorrect, please return this voucher, without alteration, explaining differences.” The voucher portion of one of these monthly checks showed the month and year and number of tons hauled at $2.00 per ton and the total amount.

The other monthly check was for an amount equal to $1.00 per ton on the coal actually hauled during the month or for $5,000.00, whichever was the lesser amount. The voucher portion of this check contained the same “remittance advice” and stated: “Temporary bonus paid on trucking of coal for month of [month] 1957 only. This payment does not alter or affect terms of coal haulage contract in any way.”

[126]*126Gardner endorsed and cashed all of these checks and claims nothing for hauling done prior to 1958.

Gardner continued to haul in 1958. On January 31, 1958, Mid-Continent notified Gardner by letter that pursuant to the agreement reached at the August 1957 meeting, the temporary extra payments of $1.00 per ton had been completed with the payment on January 16, 1958, for coal hauled during December 1957. Gardner, on February 4, 1958, acknowledged receipt of the above letter and stated that at the meeting in August, when the dollar per ton extra was agreed upon, “there was no time limit mentioned.”

On February 17, 1958, and on about the 15th of each month thereafter, including June 1958, Mid-Continent sent to Gardner only one monthly check, with the aforementioned “remittance advice” attached, showing payment for the number of tons of coal hauled during the preceding month at $2.00 per ton. Gardner cashed all of these checks; however, on receipt of each it mailed statements to Mid-Continent for $1.00 per ton extra on the first 5,000 tons hauled. On receipt of these statements Mid-Continent promptly returned the same to Gardner with a letter stating: “We are returning the attached invoice as all coal trucking has been paid for in full in accordance with the terms of the contract.”

On or about May 15, 1958, all arrangements for future coal hauling between Mid-Continent and Gardner were terminated by mutual consent.

There is no dispute with reference to any fact essential to the determination of Gardner’s first claim except one. There is a sharp conflict in the testimony as to how long the $1.00 bonus per ton was to be paid. Only two persons were present at the meeting when this extra dollar was agreed upon — Harry I. Gardner, one of the plaintiffs, and L. S. Wood, president of Mid-Continent. Gardner testified that there was no time limit as to when the extra dollar per ton on the first 5,000 tons should expire, whereas Wood testified that it was agreed that it [127]*127should be retroactive to July 1, 1957, and terminate on January 1, 1958.

By its verdict in favor of Mid-Continent there can be no doubt that the jury accepted Mid-Continent’s contention with reference to this fact — really the only fact in dispute.

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Bluebook (online)
368 P.2d 204, 149 Colo. 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gardner-v-mid-continent-coal-coke-co-colo-1962.