Hardeman-King Lumber Co. v. Hampton Bros.

142 S.W. 867, 104 Tex. 585, 1912 Tex. LEXIS 98
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 17, 1912
DocketNo. 2186.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 142 S.W. 867 (Hardeman-King Lumber Co. v. Hampton Bros.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hardeman-King Lumber Co. v. Hampton Bros., 142 S.W. 867, 104 Tex. 585, 1912 Tex. LEXIS 98 (Tex. 1912).

Opinion

Mb. Chief Justice Beowh

delivered the opinion of the court.-

The plaintiff in error, hereafter called “the company,” instituted this suit to recover from defendants in error $7,250 actual damages, accruing from the breach of a contract, whereby defendants agreed for a specified consideration to cut and deliver to the company at its sawmill all of the logs suitable for lumber growing on 640 acres of land and upon which contract the company had paid to Hampton Bros, the sum sued for as compensation for logs hauled. The contract provided that if Hampton Bros, failed to comply with the contract they should forfeit what they had earned. The defendants filed a general denial and pleaded in reconvention a claim for $600 for hauling logs from a different survey.

We copy the following from the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals :

*587 “On November 20, 1908, the lumber company was indebted to Hampton Bros, in the sum of $1126.61. Of this amount $599.42 was for cutting and hauling timber off the 640-acre tract; $508.59 for cutting and hauling timber off the Lavine tract, and $18.60 for an amount due Hampton Bros, for oats. At this time Hampton Bros, were due the lumber company a store account amounting to $599.65. Previous to the date mentioned Hampton Bros., claiming that they were losing money on the contract, endeavored to prevail on the lumber company to increase the contract price of cutting and hauling, but without success. On October 18, 1908, J. J. Hampton, one of the members of the firm, wrote to the lumber company to the effect that the' latter had not advised him in regard to the increase in logging, and saying he would be glad to hear at once from the lumber company in regard to the matter, as it was something that needed attention. On October 21" following said Hampton telegraphed the lumber company to wire its decision in regard to the matter of the last conversation. The conversation was in relation to the increase of the contract price for hauling, etc. On October 29 said Hampton again wrote to the lumber company, saying, ‘. . . if you do not see fit to make change at once I will be forced to close the business down, as I cannot do the work at the present figures.’
“S. T. King, a member of the firm of Hardeman-King Lumber Company, testified that about the 10th of November, 1908, feed was getting low and he told Tom Hampton, the other member of the firm of Hampton Bros., that if they were going to quit their contract ‘we did not care to order a ■ carload of feed and put it in our feed house when we did not know whether we would have any teams on the job to feed it to or not,’ and I says, ‘We should come to some understanding as to what we are going to do,’ and he suggested, or we talked the matter over, and we finally thought it would be a good idea to get local shipments of feed. Then he came to Nacogdoches— this was up past payday—and we owed them some money on some other hauling, which I think was something like $500, and he still seemed to have no information as to what they expected to do, so I said to him, ‘Tom, we surely can not go on in this state of uncertainty; it is an expense to you and it is an expense to us, and it seems to us that you are waiting—you have advised us you are going to quit, and we have made you several propositions and you will not say what you are going to do.’ ‘Now,’ I says, ‘if you think you are going to get this payday and then quit, you can relieve your mind of that, because we don’t expect to pay you any money until you people tell us what you are going to do.’ . . . His reply was, ‘We have not quit,’ and I says, ‘No, but you say you are going to quit, and all indicates to us that you are going to quit, and we will just bring this to a focus; if you are going to quit you can quit, and if you are, we don’t propose to pay you this money; however, if you will tell us you will continue under the contract we have, or under either of the other propositions which we have made you, we will pay you your money.’ He never said what he would do; and later in the day it dawned on me again that the feed was getting low, and I went to Tom and says, ‘What do you propose to do? Feed is *588 getting low; I ought to order more. We would like to know what you people are going to do/ and he still would not say what they were going to do, and the substance of what I could get from him was that they had not quit; and I says, ‘We are not going to live under this suspense any longer, . . . and we don’t propose to pay you the money we owe you or furnish any more feed until you tell us what you are going to do; if you will accept any of the propositions we have made you, your money is ready, and I will order feed, and you can decide later which one you want to accept.’ We owed them about $500 at that time. His reply to that was, ‘I will not tell ycra a lie for $500.’ This witness further testified that at the time of the conversation detailed above his firm also owed Hampton Bros, something over $600 for cutting and hauling timber from another tract; and further, ‘We didn’t pay Mr. Hampton because he said he could not carry on his contract any further, and we told him if he was going to quit we would not pay him the money that was due him at that time. He was working at that time; he was hauling logs when we had this first conversation. He told me in Beaumont about the first of October that they could not deliver logs at that price, but they- delivered logs after that and were hauling logs on the 20th of November. . . . They were hauling logs on the 15th of November when they demanded their pay. . . . Our payday was the 15th; I told him about the 20th of November, the day he quit work, I was not going to pay him what I owed him unless he agreed to go on with the contract, and I told him, ‘Just to be plain with you, we are not going to pay you any money until you tell us what you are going to do; and he said, “We have not quit, have we?”
“John Hampton testified: ‘I tried to comply with the contract all the way through; told Mr. King I wanted to help him out and wanted to log the mill and was going to do it; we were still trying to comply with the contract. . ... If plaintiff had paid the money due us we would have continued to run the mill; we never had any understanding that my brother would demand payment, get the money and forfeit the contract; that was not our intention; I did try to get him to raise the price, but I had no intention of quitting the contract.’
“Tom Hampton testified: ‘He refused to pay without I would agree to carry out the contract. I told him I had a written contract I had been working under all the time and I did not see any use to make any agreement about it; that we were logging the mill and had been logging it, and the teams were going regularly. He would not pay unless I would agree to go on. When I came to Nacogdoches the teams were hauling logs, and when I went back down there (Newton County) they were hauling logs. I told them to get some feed, and he said they were not going to get any feed until I promised to complete the work.’ ”

The evidence was sufficient to justify the conclusion that defendants in error intended to abandon the contract, but the evidence is uncontroverted that they were 'engaged in performing the work under the contract. The intention or threat to quit did not constitute a breach *589

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Bluebook (online)
142 S.W. 867, 104 Tex. 585, 1912 Tex. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardeman-king-lumber-co-v-hampton-bros-tex-1912.