Keller v. Bley

15 P. 705, 15 Or. 429, 1887 Ore. LEXIS 99
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 21, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 15 P. 705 (Keller v. Bley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keller v. Bley, 15 P. 705, 15 Or. 429, 1887 Ore. LEXIS 99 (Or. 1887).

Opinion

Thayer, J.

This appeal comes here from a judgment of the Circuit Court for the county of Multnomah. It appears from the transcript that the respondent brought an action against the appellant in said Circuit Court, counting upon three several causes of action. The first cause was upon a contract of sale of certain tools, for the alleged price of $380, upon which he admitted a payment of $25. The second one was for work and labor performed by respondent for the appellant, alleged to have been of the agreed value of $29; and the third one was for work and labor upon a certain written contract, and subsequent parol modification, to clear and grub a tract of 35 acres of land, and to cut into cord-wood all fallen timbers thereon, and all timbers he should cut down in clearing the tract. Said contract contained the mutual agreements of the parties, and the respondent alleged in his complaint, in reference thereto, that he performed the same on his part; that he provided himself with over $400 worth of tools and apparatus to be used in said work, and was progressing therewith, and in compliance with the terms and conditions of the contract, when the appellant refused to comply with his part of it; that he cleared a portion of the tract, and cut into cord-wood 282 cords of wood from the timber referred to; that the clearing at the contract price amounted to $1,112.50, and the cutting of the cord-wood .to $352.50, which sums were, respectively, the reasonable value of the work; that the appellant had paid thereon the sum of $746, leaving unpaid [431]*431a balance of $719, which the appellant agreed to pay respondent on demand, and the latter agreed to accept in satisfaction thereof the sum of $662.50, and to remove from the premises, and did remove therefrom; that he had frequently demanded payment of said sum of $662.50, but the appellant had failed to pay any part of it. This sum, with the two other claims, amounted to $1,046.50, which he demanded judgment for.

The appellant denied the first cause of action. He admitted the second one, but denied the value of the work, and denied the parol modification of the written contract as alleged. He also denied that respondent was progressing with the work, and in full compliance with the terms and conditions of the contract, when the former refused to comply with his part of it; denied that the respondent cleared the amount of land alleged, or that he cut the 282 cords of wood; denied the value of the work as alleged by the respondent, or that he agreed to pay therefor, or that the respondent agreed to accept, in full satisfaction thereof, the sum of $662.50, or any sum.

And for a further answer, after admitting that the parties modified the terms of the written agreement so far as cutting the wood was concerned, alleged that by the terms of such modification the respondent was to cut all the best wood at the rate of ■ one dollar a cord; that respondent entered upon the performance of the agreement, and did work in clearing, worth, in the aggregate $450, and cut 108 cords of good wood, and 133 cords of rotten, unsound, and unmarketable wood, which was wholly worthless; that respondent so unreasonably delayed the performance of the contract on his part that he gave him notice to quit the premises, and finally put him out by proceedings of forcible entry and detainer, and respondent wholly abandoned the work; that appellant paid him the sum of $738; that respondent did not complete the work in time for a crop as provided in the written contract, and so unskillfully and in such an unworkmanlike manner performed the clearing and the cutting of the wood, that appellant was damaged in the sum of $50, and by reason of the delay, in the sum of $150.

The bill of exceptions shows that respondent gave evidence [432]*432at the trial tending to show that the first and third causes of action were an account stated, and of his performance of the work, and the appellant’s refusal to comply with the contract upon his part; that the appellant gave evidence tending to show that some of the wood cut was unsound, and decayed, and that the land claimed to have been grubbed was full of hidden stumps; that it would cost a considerable sum of money to clear it in accordance with the contract, and that the use of the land for a crop would have been worth fifteen dollars an acre if it had been properly cleared. It further appears from the bill of exceptions that after the oral testimony had been produced, upon request of respondent and consent of appellant, the jury impaneled to try the issues were allowed to view the premises upon which the work had been done. Before retiring they were properly instructed by the court, and a special bailiff appointed to accompany them and point out the premises, and were put in charge of a regular bailiff of the court. That the jury proceeded to view the said premises accordingly, and the next morning appeared in their proper places in court; and the case being ready for further proceedings, counsel for the appellant moved the court that the jury be discharged from the further consideration of the cause, and that it be set for hearing before another jury, upon the grounds that there had been misconduct on the part of the jury upon the occasion of the view, and that two of the counsel for the respondent had conducted themselves improperly on said occasion, which misconduct consisted in the fact that Chris. Nolan, one of the jurors, did not go onto the premises with the other jurors, but remained separate and apart from them, and that two of the respondent’s attorneys had, during the view, accompanied and mingled with the jury, and had made communications with them concerning the cause or matters connected with the case; whereupon the court made a summary investigation of the charges, and found the fact to be that it had been stipulated among the attorneys that one attorney on each side should accompany the jury on the view, but that by some misunderstanding, three attorneys on behalf of the respondent had accompanied the jury, and one attorney for the appellant; [433]*433that Drake and Sears went together, and were not in company with, hut were in sight of the jury; that two of counsel for respondent walked over the premises, mingling with or being near to the jury; that no conversation with the jurors was had, and no communications were made by them, or either of them, to the jury during said view; that the juror Chris. Nolan, by reason of lameness, was unable to walk over the premises, but remained in a carriage on the highway alongside of, and in view of the greater portion of the premises; thereupon the court overruled the said motion, to which ruling said counsel excepted.

Several exceptions were taken to the admission of testimony, also to the refusal to admit testimony, and to the charge of the judge to the jury. The case involved, mainly, questions of fact, of a character which a jury were peculiarly suited to determine.

Proof of verbal alteration of contract. It is claimed by the appellant’s counsel that the court erred in allowing evidence of the verbal alterations of the written contract. He contends that the contract was not to be performed within a year after the alleged verbal agreement adding conditions to it, and that the latter comes within the Statute of Frauds. That cause of action, as I understand it, was not to enforce the contract, but to-recover for work and labor, upon a promise to pay for the same. Proof of the contract was a circumstance in the particular case, was á part of the general facts, and the proof was merely to give an understanding of the circumstances connected with the affair.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 P. 705, 15 Or. 429, 1887 Ore. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keller-v-bley-or-1887.