James v. Muir

33 Mich. 223, 1876 Mich. LEXIS 23
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 11, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 33 Mich. 223 (James v. Muir) 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
James v. Muir, 33 Mich. 223, 1876 Mich. LEXIS 23 (Mich. 1876).

Opinion

Campbell, J:

James sued Muir for a quantity of square timber delivered to the latter in June, 1873. The declaration contains one count on special contract, one for timber sold and delivered, and agreed to be paid for at a reasonable price, and the common counts.

The special count averred a sale of four hundred and twenty-eight pieces of timber, August 6, 1872, then in Arbola, Tuscola county, and an agreement to deliver the same to defendant in Bay City in the spring of 1873 as early as the [225]*225ice and weather would permit; and that defendant, in consideration thereof, agreed and promised to pay the plaintiff therefor, as the same should be delivered at Bay City, the market price of square oak timber of like quality at Bay City aforesaid at the time of the delivery thereof. It then avers a delivery and acceptance of three hundred and sixty-two pieces, and proceeds as follows: “that a portion of said timber so agreed to be delivered, to-wit: sixty-six pieces, the said plaintiff did not deliver with the said three hundred and sixty-two pieces, because the same, without his fault or neglect, while the same was being run to Bay City aforesaid, became scattered, and portions thereof wholly lost, and the said plaintiff refused to deliver the said sixty-six pieces, or any part thereof, because the said defendant wholly failed and refused to comply with and fulfill his said contract in this, that the said defandant refused .to pay for said timber, or any part thereof, at a higher or greater price than fifteen cents per cubic foot;” and it then avers the market price to have been twenty-eight cents a foot.

The verdict was at the rate of fifteen cents a cubic foot, for so much as had not been paid for at that rate by advances.

The plaintiff, to make out his case, besides showing a delivery of the timber, introduced the following paper, claiming it to be a contract of sale, and to contain the entire bargain between the parties:

“Port Huron, August 6, 1872.

“Beceived from B. Muir the sum of $629 00, C. cur., (six hundred and twenty-nine dollars, C. cur.) being pay in full of all demands for making and delivering square oak timber at Bay City, Michigan, for the year 1872. Also, B. Muir has advanced to J. James $2,077 42 C. c., (two thousand no hundred and seventy-seven dollars forty-two cents, C. c.) on 428 pieces of timber now lying in town of Arbela, Michigan, measured and marked M., which -said timber J. James agrees to deliver at Bay City, Michigan, in spring of 1873, as early as the ice and weather will permit, free of [226]*226all incumbrances, to B. Muir. Interest at the rate of 10 per cent, from 1st of April, year 1872, till the timber is delivered at Bay City. J. James agrees to pay and account to B, Muir in spring of 1873 for the within mentioned §2,077 42, C. c., with interest, advanced on said timber to be delivered in spring of 1873 at Bay City, interest at the rate of 10 per cent., C. c., from 1st of April, 1872 till the timber is delivered at Bay City in the year 1873.

“'[Signed] J. James.”

When this contract was produced, it appeared to have been altered, and the alteration was explained and admitted to have been made at the time of signing; the draft having expressed a rate of payment in the words “at the rate as in 1872,” and nothing having been expressed as to interest on advances.

The plaintiff swore that on the delivery of the timber actually brought down in 1873, defendant was not willing to pay for it except at the last year’s prices, while plaintiff was unwilling to settle on such terms on account of the arrangement in the writing. An agreement was made to arbitrate, which was not carried into effect. Plaintiff" also swore that the balance of the timber was scattered along the river, and could not then be delivered, and had not been.

Upon cross-examination, and in other ways, a considerable amount of testimony was introduced, to which plaintiff objected, and which will be referred to presently.

Plaintiff claims that the agreement of August 6th, 1872, on which he seeks to recover, was in itself a complete and binding bargain, containing every essential of a contract of sale, except the price, which it is claimed appears by implication.

As this is a suit in which defendant and not plaintiff is the “party to be charged,” and as the payment of the price is the only thing for which he is chargeable, it may be a (¡uestion of some importance whether, if this paper is a contract of sale, the statute of frauds is complied with so as to bind him. Where a contract is executory and not executed, [227]*227it is laid down by somo authorities, if not generally, that unless the price is fixed distinctly according to some standard, either bf amount, or of market, or of reasonableness, or some other method of ascertainment, the contract is incomplete, and the purchaser is not bound. Where goods are accepted, and nothing has been said about the price, a reasonable price has been recognized as 'correct. In Acebal v. Levy, 10 Bing., 376, it rvas held that where a contract was' silent as to price, and there was evidence of a parol agreement as to price, there could be no recovery on a quantum valebant, and that á contract in writing was as necessary for a reasonable price as any other. In Valpy v. Gibson, 4 C. B., 837, where the court found expressly an acceptance of goods where the invoice was priced, Wilde, C. J., remarked obiter, that the Omission of price did not necessarily invalidate a contract of sale, and that goods were frequently sold by a contract “which does not specify the price or mode of payment, leaving them to be, settled by somo future agreement, or to be determined by what is reasonable under the circumstances.” In that case the court found everything had been agreed upon, and the discussion was not important, except as intimating that when the price was not mentioned, that element was not thereby fixed by implication at a reasonable or any other rate, but was open to proof. Proof that there was a parol agreement disproves the completeness of the memorandum. — Benjamin on Sales.

In the present case it is sufficient to say that according to Acebal v. Levy there is at least no implication of a promise to pay at what may happen to bo the market rate, which may not be always, as there held, a reasonable rate 3 and tire contract does not support the special count.

As the contract, whatever it may be, becomes important in another point of view, it is still necessary to determine whether it is such an instrument, as with the addition of such help as might come from the implication claimed, is' complete enough otherwise to exclude parol evidence of the real ature of the agreement.

[228]*228We do not think that the writing, taken by itself ¿done, indicates a sale at all. It shows upon its face that it is a settlement of some past transaction, in part, and that the defendant had, as early as the April previous, advanced a large sum of money on four hundred and twenty-eight pieces of timber, identified by their marks, which plaintiff was to deliver to defendant free of encumbrance the next-spring, when plaintiff was to pay and account for the advances and interest.

There is nothing to indicate for what purpose defendant was to receive or hold this timber, whether as purchaser, mortgagee or factor. It is quite as consistent with a loan upon the security of the timber as anything else.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 Mich. 223, 1876 Mich. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-v-muir-mich-1876.