H. M. Loud & Sons Lumber Co. v. Peter

20 Ohio C.C. 73
CourtLucas Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1900
StatusPublished

This text of 20 Ohio C.C. 73 (H. M. Loud & Sons Lumber Co. v. Peter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lucas Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
H. M. Loud & Sons Lumber Co. v. Peter, 20 Ohio C.C. 73 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1900).

Opinion

Haines, J.

• A petition in error is brought for the purpose of reversing the judgment of the court of common pleas in an action wherein Alvin Peter was plaintiff and the H, M. Loud & Soria Lumber Company was defendant — a case which was. tried to the court, a jury being waived by the parties. This case was argued at the last term of this court,, towards-its close. It being a case of importance and in some respects-rather novel, not having time to fully consider it then, we-continued the case until the present term. We have now taken the case up, and.have read the record and the very full briefs of counsel in the case, and all of the decisions-that have been cited by counsel on either side, who have-been industrious and learned in the collection of decisions and reports.

The plaintiff charged that the defendant the Loud &Sons Lumber Company, in November, 1895, agreed to load the Sprague, a scow so called, belonging to the plaintiff, at and from the docks upon the lake front at Oscoda, in the state of Michigan; and the gist of the action is found in this paragraph:

“It was further agreed between said parties that the said defendant should at all times, while the said Sprague was at Oscoda in the service above stated, keep a tug at said [75]*75point which should at all times be in readiness to move the-said Sprague from point to point, and in case of storm to-move her to a point of safety. The defendant was at that time the owner of a tug called the Petrel, which was located at that point, and which was the only tug at that point available for said service, and was the tug which the said defendant agreed to keep at said port for the service above indicated.”

The petition then avers that the boat proceeded to receive her load, commencing to load on the 28th day of November, 1895; that she had very nearly finished loading about 4 o’clock on the afternoon of the 28th, when a very heavy storm arose, and was of such severity that the boat was sunk and seriously injured.

This is met by the defendant with a general denial, so fár as the material points are concerned, and on those issues the case proceeded to trial.

Testimony was offered on behalf of the plaintiff below tending to sustain the allegations of his petition,- and on behalf of the defendant in opposition, Briefly, it appears that some little time before this Mr. Peter had made an arrangement with one McGlone, who was then an agent for the Loud Company, at Toledo, to send this vessel to Oscoda to receive a cargo of cedar posts which the Loud & Sons Company were to furnish. The vessel went in a tow. There were three vessels in the tow, the Swallow being a propeller, the other two being scows. The Sprague was the only boat that was owned by Peter, They proceeded to Oscoda, arriving there about the 24th of the month, At night there was a heavy wind came up. These vessels, together with the Petrel and perhaps some other vessels, were lying in a dock at Oscoda called Pennoyer’s dock. After the storm had abated the captain of the Sprague, together with the captain of the Swallow, went to ¿he office of the defendant company to inquire about the freight, and were told that the same hadn’t come as arranged, and were'informed that the cedar posts were frozen in the bayou during the recent cold weather, and it would be impracticable to load the vessel with those. That statement seemed to be acquiesced in by the captains, and thereupon they asked Loud if he had other freight, and upon looking-over his books he said [76]*76he had for one vessel, and they might leave whichever one of them they chose. Thereupon the captains telephoned to Alpena to see if they could get freight there. They found they could get for two vessels. Meanwhile the captains had a further conversation with Loud, and it was- agreed that the Sprague was to be left at Oscoda, and would have to take her load at different docks. And in that conversation occurred, it is claimed by plaintiff, the disputed agreement, the plaintiff claiming the agreement was as alleged in its petition, and the defendant denying that it agreed to keep a tug there to care for the vessel — or saying anything more than that the tug, when there, could take the boat from dock to dock to take on its load, the tug at the time being used in the fishing business. Whether the contract is as stated in the petitioner whether it is otherwise, is the point upon which there is a difference in the testimony — a point of difference upon tvhich the court below was called to pass, and which has been discussed very fully by counsel in the argument of the case before ua. On that point, the case having been fried to the court, the rule that prevails in the state of Ohio is laid down by the supreme court of this state in 22 Ohio St., 122, Dean v. King et al., where the court say, that where there is a motion for a new trial upon the ground that the verdict is against the weight of the evidence, and it is overruled, “a reviewing court should not reverse, unless the verdict (or finding of fact, if the jury be waived) is so clearly unsupported by the weight of evidence as to indicate some misapprehension, or mistake, or bias on the part of the jury, or a willful disregard of duty,’’ In case it is set aside, it must appear that the court below rendered a decision against the clear weight of the evidence.

Guided by the rules laid down by. the supreme court, we are unable to say that the court has erred in coming to the conclusion that this contract was made as set out by this petition. Indeed, the testimony was very strong that it was made as stated. Unfortunately it was not reduced to writing, and perhaps not as distinctly remembered as it ought to have been. But’so far as the main contract is concerned, it was made by these two captains with Henry M. Loud, the secretary of the company, when no other person was present — -the two captains asserting on the one [77]*77hand that it is as stated in the petition; Mr. Loud denying that it went as far as was claimed by these parties, and denying especially that he had agreed to furnish the tug or to keep a tug there for the purpose of protecting the Sprague. Additional testimony to support that is offered by the captain of the Petrel, who testifies to a conversation he had with the captain of the Sprague, which is contradicted by the captain of the Sprague and his mate. I am not certain but that if we were called upon to try this case as original triars, we would have come to the same decision as the court. Be that as it may, we do not think that we are called upon to interfere with the decision of the court.

I should mention that on the 29th, the last day, the Petrel, which was engaged at the time in the fishing business for a firm composed in part of the Loud & Sons Company and another party, proceeded to a point out in the lake about eighteen or twenty miles, for the purpose tof raising nets and bringing in fish, There was left in he harbor only two vessels of any kind that were operated by steam; one was called the Martini, and was a sort of a square rigged scow, propelled by steam. That was loaed for lumber, and was perhaps engaged in local trade — not a very large boat, nor very much of a sea-going boat, I judge by the description of her and from her build. The other was a small tug, called the Angler. At noon the captain of the Sprague, designing to go to another dock near by, asked of the captain of the Martini who was lying near him, loading perhaps from the same dock, if he would take the Sprague around. The captain did take her around at the noon hou r, and went to his position and went on loading.

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Bluebook (online)
20 Ohio C.C. 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/h-m-loud-sons-lumber-co-v-peter-ohcirctlucas-1900.