Grice v. Noble

26 N.W. 688, 59 Mich. 515, 1886 Mich. LEXIS 1042
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 3, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 26 N.W. 688 (Grice v. Noble) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grice v. Noble, 26 N.W. 688, 59 Mich. 515, 1886 Mich. LEXIS 1042 (Mich. 1886).

Opinion

Morse, J.

Plaintiffs sued defendants in assumpsit, filing a declaration upon the common counts, under which they presented a bill of particulars as follows:

“ To sawing 502,300 feet of lumber at $2.50 per M., under contract between E. R. Grice & Bro. and Noble, Cooper & Creevy, which contract bears date April 5, 1884, $1,255.75,”

The defendants pleaded the general issue, and gave notice that they would prove, under such issue, upon the trial, that the work was done under a certain contract, (setting it out;) and that, while defendants had fulfilled their contract, the plaintiffs had failed to do so in several particulars, to-wit:

(1.) They did not “slab the logs as light.as possible.”
(2.) They did not commence sawing for a long time after the date agreed upon in the contract.
(3.) They sawed for other parties, without the consent of defendants.
(4.) They did not manufacture the lumber in a good and worktnan-like manner, and did not furnish the proper tools and machinery for manufacturing according to the contract.
(5.) They did not saw the lumber as directed by the defendants, thereby violating the contract.

And asking a recoupment for damages occasioned by such alleged non-fulfillment of the contract, in the sum of $1,000. Defendants also gave notice of set-off, and filed a bill of particulars of the same, among which was a claim for a bill of goods furnished one Walter Rapson, who was in the employ of plaintiffs.

’Opon the issue thus formed, the case went to the jury, who returned a verdict for the plaintiffs in the sum of $829.75.

Over thirty assignments of error are made in the record, but in disposing of them we shall follow the argument of defendants’ counsel, who grouped them under three general heads.

[518]*518The contract between the parties was as follows:

“ This contract, made this fifth day of April, A. D. 188é, by and between E. B. Grice & Bro., of Bridgehampton, Sanilac eonnty, Michigan, of the first part, and Noble, Cooper & Creevy, of Port Austin, Michigan, of the second part, witnesseth:

The said E. B. Grice & Bro., of the first part, agree to saw the logs belonging to the said parties of the second part now landed at the Walter Bapson farm, in the township of Lincoln, on the town line between Verona and Lincoln townships, Huron county, Michigan, and amounting to about six hundred thousand feet of lumber.

The said lumber is to be manufactured in a good and workman-like manner, the said parties of the first part agreeing to use a good edger in the manufacture of said lumber, and to butt off ends and split boards and plank (or lumber) when it is required in order to make it more valuable. The parties of the first part agree to saw the said lumber into such thicknesses and sizes as the parties of the second part may direct, but not less than one inch in thickness. The said parties of the first part agree to commence sawing the said logs in about a week from date, and to continue to saw them until sawed up, and not to saw lumber for other parties unless consented to by the parties of the second part. The sawing of said lumber is not to be paid for in log measure, but in actual board measure ; and if the lumber is to be inspected before being shipped, the inspector’s scale is to be taken, but if not inspected before shipped it is to be scaled by some competent person, before being shipped, or when loading on the cars. The said parties of the first part are to take the logs where they are, and deliver the lumber alongside of a switch to be built on the Port Huron & Northwestern Bail-road, piled up with cross-pieces. Whenever the machinery should get out of order, and bad manufacturing result from it, or whenever bad manufacturing occurs in any way, the party of the second part reserves the right to stop the parties of the first part from manufacturing. The party of the first part agrees to slab the logs as light as possible.

The party of the second part agree to pay the said party of the first part, for the work above mentioned, the sum of two dollars and fifty cents per thousand feet, as above stated, in the following manner: One dollar and fifty cents per thous- and feet on the expiration of the first month’s sawing on said logs; on the expiration of the second month s sawing they are to have fifty cents per thousand feet more on the first [519]*519month’s sawing, and two dollars per thousand feet on the second month’s sawing ; and the balance when the job is completed.”

The first three assignments relate to the admission of plaintiffs’ testimony as to the amount of lumber sawed. The measurement of the lumber, under the contract, was to be actual board measure, and not log measure. If inspected before shipping, the inspector’s scale was to be taken; but if not, it was to be scaled by some competent person before being shipped, or when loaded upon the cars.

It appears from the record that defendants were shipping the lumber while the sawing was going on, and defendants measured the same as they shipped it. It was claimed on the part of the plaintiffs that, after the job was completed, they asked defendants to finish the scale, and they said they could not do it at present, but would in a short time. They put plaintiffs off in this way once or twice, and finally said they would not scale it until they shipped it. The plaintiffs told them they had waited long enough, and would have to sue them. Defendants replied that it would take longer to get the money in that event than plaintiffs thought, but at the time set up no claim that it was the duty of the plaintiffs to have any further scale or measurement made. Defendants had scaled and shipped about one-half the lumber.

The plaintiffs thereupon brought suit, and one of them, Charles Grice, was allowed, against objection, to testify to the measure made by him in the mill. as the boards came from the saw, the witness sealing the inside boards, and the edger-man scaling the boards that went to the edger, putting the amount down on a tally-board, which was added to witness’ tally, and put down in his book nearly every night in the week; sometimes, however, running two or three nights before a transfer from tally-board to the book would be made.

James Gordon, Charles Berget, and Jesse Tarzwell, the men who worked on the edger, gave testimony as to their tally corroborating Grice. This evidence was objected to because it was not the scale called for by the contract, and a [520]*520motion was made to strike out all the testimony on the ground that it was not such evidence as the plaintiffs could recover upon. The testimony was allowed to stand, and the court instructed the jury in relation thereto as follows :

“ Under this contract, if the defendants went on and employed a man to do the scaling or measuring of the lumber, and in this way scaled or measured a part of the lumber, and the plaintiffs, after the completion of the job, asked defendants to measure the lumber and pay the amount due, and the defendants refused or neglected to do so, without setting up any claim that it was the duty of the plaintiffs to have any further scale or measurement made, the defendants cannot now defeat the plaintiffs’ claim for want of the scale which defendants had themselves undertaken and partly made.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 N.W. 688, 59 Mich. 515, 1886 Mich. LEXIS 1042, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grice-v-noble-mich-1886.