Harris v. Rutledge

19 Iowa 388
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 8, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 19 Iowa 388 (Harris v. Rutledge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. Rutledge, 19 Iowa 388 (iowa 1865).

Opinion

Dillon, J.

i weights ah?bS?:as‘ percb' By tbe written contract tbe plaintiff agreed “to build one rock house, sixteen by eighteen feet in the c^ear> fu™shing everything, except woodwork, at $3.50 per perch." "When made, this contract was not stamped; but, under section 163 of the act of Congress, of June 30th, 1864 (Stat. at Large, 1863,1864, p. 218), it was post stamped on the trial. It thereby became as valid and binding between the parties as if it had been duly stamped at the time of execution. The contract nowhere specifies the amount or quantity of which “ a perch ” shall consist. On the trial, the plaintiff claimed that it was the understanding of the parties, though it was not expressed in the contract, that a perch should contain only sixteen and one-half cubic feet. He also claimed that such was the general custom among masons, or at least was the local custom of that neighborhood. These claims are controverted by the defendant.

The plaintiff was examined as a witness in his own behalf, and stated, inter alia: “ My understanding was sixteen and one-half feet to the perch, and I never supposed tbe defendant understood it differently.” ■

“Plaintiff’s attorney,” so continues the bill of exceptions, “then asked the witness, if there was a custom among masons, as to the number of cubic feet constituting a perch of stone work. The defendant objected, for the reason that the statute fixes the number of cubic feet in a perch. The objection of the defendant was sustained by the court, for the reason, that custom could not be proven to conflict with an express statute ,• but the court further held, that the plaintiff might show an express or an implied contract to count sixteen and one-half feet to the perch, or he might show, that he, plaintiff, understood that he was working at sixteen and one-half feet per perch, and that defendant knew that fact, or had good reason to know it.” The plaintiff, against the defendant’s objection, was then [390]*390permitted to testify as follows: “I built a stone smoke house for the defendant, the year previous to the present work, and in estimating the number of perches, I reckoned sixteen and one-half feet to the perch. Defendant also took the dimensions of the smoke house, and said his estimate agreed with mine, and he.paid me for sixteen and one-half feet per perch.”

The statute (Title XIII, “Regulations pertaining to Trade, ch. 71,” Weights and Measures) provides (§ 1777) that “the ‘perch’ of mason work or stone is hereby declared to consist of twenty-five feet cubic measure.” It also contains the following general provision (§ 1.778) applicable to the subject in hand: “ Contracts in which no other scale or standard is expressed shall be taken to mean the above. (See corresponding provision, Blue Book, 1843, p. 655, § 7.)

2. — contracts: custom, The object of a statute is to be considered in giving it a construction. A few considerations will serve to make this object manifest. Under the national Con- . stitution (arc. 1, § 8) congress has power “ to fix the standard of weights and measures.” This power, it has never exercised. And until it is exercised, the respective States may, for themselves, regulate weights and measures. Rawle on Const., ch. 9; Story on Const., § 1122; Weaver v. Fegely, 29 Penn., 27 (1857), and authorities there cited.

Experience in all ages of the world has shown that this is a proper and even necessary subject of legislative regulation ; that in no other way can certainty and uniformity be secured. “ Divers weights and measures ” were deprecated by the wise king. Proverbs xx, 10. And similar grievances led to the declaration, in Magna Charta, that there should be but “ one weight and measure throughout the kingdom.” To secure uniformity, numerous statutes [391]*391have from time to time been passed in England, and by the various States in this country.

It was especially proper that the legislature should fix or define a “perch” of masonry, for aside from statute, the amount is not only uncertain, but this uncertainty is of a most material character. Webster (Diet., Unabr., 1865, voce, perch) thus defines it: “ In solid measure, a mass sixteen and one-half feet long, or á foot each in height and in breadth, or sixteen and one-half cubic feet.” Worcester gives no definition in solid measure. Many of the arithmetics fail to define a “perch,” but one of the latest (Robinson, p. 169, 1860) says: “A perch of stone or of masonry is sixteen and one-half feet long, one and one-half feet wide, and one foot high,” or twenty-four and three-quarters cubic feet.” The new American Encyclopedia (voce, “ perch ”), after giving other definitions, adds: “In masonry, a perch, is equal to twenty-five cubic feet.”

To obviate this uncertainty, and to secure uniformity throughout the State, were the objects of the statute. If a man in Davenport contracts with an inhabitant of Leelaire for a perch of stone, or with his neighbor mechanic to lay up a perch, the statute binds both parties, and local customs, fixing a different measure cannot be set up, unless mentioned in the contract. To allow it to be done would nullify the letter and subvert the policy of the statute; would introduce that uncertainty and resulting litigation, which it was the manifest and wise design of the statute to remove and prevent.

Thus we regard the case upon principle. Counsel cited no authorities directly applicable, but our own examination has shown that our opinion is amply and uniformly supported by adjudications elsewhere. Thus the same view of precisely a similar question has been taken by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, in a case essentially the same as the one at bar.

[392]*392The statute of that State of April 15, 1834, provided, that “twenty hundred shall make one ton.” An agreement in writing was made, whereby the defendant contracted “to weigh off and deliver forty tons of pig metal at twenty dollars per tonbreach, that defendant had delivered but thirty-four and one-half tons. On the trial, defendant offered to prove, “that the universal custom with dealers in pig metal is to buy and sell by the gross ton of 2268 pounds, and that defendant has akoays sold according to that weight and usage." The District Court received the evidence, and it was proved that for twenty-four years the custom, at the place where the metal was by the contract to be delivered, was universal, to give 2268 pounds sand mound metal to the ton, and the plaintiff accordingly recovered. But on appeal, this judgment was reversed by the Supreme Court. Lewis, Ch. J., delivering the opinion, says: “If twenty hundred pounds make a ton, the defendant had delivered, before suit brought, the quantity required by his covenant. But the plaintiff claimed 2268 pounds to the ton, and the court, on proof of a custom ‘among those dealing in metal throughout the iron region up the Allegany river, where the contract in suit was made, and where the metal was to be delivered,’ permitted the jury to find that the contract was for the number of pounds claimed by the plaintiff.” The Supreme Court considered that it was important that the standard should be uniform throughout the State, and binding upon all men within it. Local customs would contravene this policy, and lead to the uncertainty which the statute intended to prevent. The statute entered into the contract and formed an essential part of it The contract must be intended to have been made with reference to the law. Being in writing, the court should construe it.

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Bluebook (online)
19 Iowa 388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-rutledge-iowa-1865.