Illges v. Congdon

27 N.W.2d 716, 251 Wis. 50, 1947 Wisc. LEXIS 320
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMay 16, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 27 N.W.2d 716 (Illges v. Congdon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Illges v. Congdon, 27 N.W.2d 716, 251 Wis. 50, 1947 Wisc. LEXIS 320 (Wis. 1947).

Opinion

Barlow, J.

Upon a prior hearing of this case, reported in 248 Wis. 85, 20 N. W. (2d) 722, 21 N. W. (2d) 647, the court held that Illges and Hamm so materially breached the contract as to warrant Congdon in electing to terminate it, and that Congdon so terminated the contract. It was a joint venture, in which the trees owned by Congdon were to be cut and sawed into lumber by Hamm, with Illges as the sales agent to dispose of the finished product. Slab wood was to be divided equally between Congdon and Illges. From the proceeds of the sale there was to be paid, (a) $15 per thousand board feet to Congdon for timber; (b) $30 per thousand to Illges and Hamm for logging, sawing, and converting the *52 timber into lumber products, and selling' and disposing of the same; and (c) additional proceeds to be divided equally between Congdon, Illges, and Hamm. More detailed facts and terms of the contract are fully set forth in the previous opinion. The judgment of the trial court was reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings in accordance with the opinion. The case is before us at this time as the result of the action of the trial court pursuant to said decision.

It is undisputed that seventy thousand board feet of lumber was produced, of which eighteen thousand board feet was sold. Before the enterprise was terminated Congdon took nine thousand feet of lumber for his own use, claiming respondents were to produce lumber for him at $18 per thousand feet. This left forty-three thousand feet of lumber produced which was undisposed of. At the termination of the contract Cong-don took possession of the balance of the lumber, refusing to permit it to be sold as ordered by the trial court and requested by the'respondents. Between the termination of the contract and the time of the trial of the original action Congdon used three thousand feet of lumber for his own use, and between the time of trial of the original action and June 20, 1946, he appropriated and used for his own purposes twelve thousand feet of lumber from the joint enterprise. The eighteen thousand feet of lumber that was sold brought $1,220'. 52, or an average price of $67.80 per thousand. $40 of this amount was received by Congdon, and the balance by Illges and Hamm, or $590.26 each.

October 1, 1942, Illges advanced to Congdon the sum of $1,500, which was to be repaid to Illges from Congdon’s proceeds of the joint enterprise.

The trial court ordered the respective parties to pay to the clerk of court the proceeds received by them from the salé of lumber produced, and ordered Congdori to pay to Hamm and Illges $21 per thousand for the nine thousand feet of lumber *53 taken by Congdon while the joint enterprise was operating. Congdon was ordered to pay Illges the $1,500 advanced, with interest at six per cent from October 1,1942, and to pay to the clerk of court $203.40 for the benefit of the joint enterprise for the three thousand feet of lumber taken by Congdon between the time of the termination of the contract and date of the first trial, at $67.80 per thousand. All lumber that remained which had not been taken by Congdon was ordered sold by the sheriff of Walworth county in the manner that personal property is sold on execution except that the publishing and posting of notices was to be for three weeks, and the proceeds of the sale paid into court by the sheriff. He provided that if the lumber sold for less than $2,712, which would be the amount forty thousand feet of lumber would produce at, $67.80 per thousand, Congdon was to pay into court immediately upon confirmation of sale any deficit which the lumber produced. Thus all the proceeds of the joint enterprise were to be paid into court except the sum of $189 to be paid by Congdon for nine thousand feet of lumber taken by him from the stock pile before the contract was terminated, for which provision was made for the payment by Congdon direct to Illges and Hamm. The sheriff’s fees and expenses and fees of the clerk of court were to be paid from the proceeds of the sale. In this manner all the assets of the joint enterprise would be converted into cash and deposited with the clerk of court. Distribution was ordered to be made in accordance with the terms of the contract, which in substance was one third to each party to the joint enterprise. The court found that Congdon suffered only nominal damages for breach of the contract.

Appellant contends that when he terminated the contract he became the owner of the lumber which had been produced for the joint enterprise and that respondents, Illges and Hamm, are entitled to $18.75 per thousand, which is the cost of producing the lumber as found by the trial court in the original *54 action, less any amount which they had already received. He also claims substantial damages by reason of the breach of the contract by respondents.

No claim is made by appellant that the lumber produced prior to the termination of the contract was inferior by reason of workmanship or nianner of production. The lumber produced was of the type and kind anticipated to be produced. This portion of the contract was fully performed by the respondents. Appellant did not terminate the contract for the reason that respondents failed to properly produce the type of lumber which they contracted to produce. The contract was terminated for other material violations, which this court sustained. If appellant had not terminated the contract and had brought suit for damages for breach of contract he would have been unable to prove any damages by reason of the quality of the lumber produced or the workmanship in producing it. As the lumber was produced it became the property of the joint enterprise and appellant suffered no damage by reason of this fact. If respondents had violated no other material portion of the contract it would have been continued and appellant would have realized from the sale of the lumber the amount which the court has here awarded him. The theory underlying the right of recovery in a case where there is a breach of contract is to permit the innocent party to recover from the guilty party any loss or damage which the innocent party suffered by reason of the breach. It is not the purpose of the law to penalize the guilty party for the breach to the profit of the innocent party. Fischer v. Schumacher (1932), 207 Wis. 10, 238 N. W. 801; Manning v. School District No. 6 (1905), 124 Wis. 84, 102 N. W. 356.

With reference to the question of damages it was said in the original opinion (p. 95a) :

“Whether the refusal of plaintiff and interpleaded defendant to carry out the terms of this contract was such material breach as to warrant rescission is a question of whether it is more conformable to justice to permit the defendant to rescind *55 it or on the other hand to require him to perform his promise and bring an action for damages.”

In that statement we were correct, but in the opinion on rehearing we dose by saying that the only questions left for determination were the damages, if any, Congdon suffered, and the rights of the parties in the remaining assets of the joint enterprise in accordance with the terms of the contract.

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27 N.W.2d 716, 251 Wis. 50, 1947 Wisc. LEXIS 320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illges-v-congdon-wis-1947.