King v. Tabor

110 P. 601, 15 N.M. 488
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 16, 1910
DocketNo. 1263
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 110 P. 601 (King v. Tabor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
King v. Tabor, 110 P. 601, 15 N.M. 488 (N.M. 1910).

Opinion

OPINION OP THE COURT.

WRIGHT, J.

1 The appellant assigns five grounds of error. The first assignment assigns error in that the court failed to instruct the jury as to the application of the territorial law relative to the rule prescribed for measuring hay in stacks. This assignment cannot be considered by the court for the reason that the appellant wholly failed to call such failure to instruct to the court’s attention ■ and thereby give him an opportunity to correctly state the law to the jury. This rule has been generally adhered to by this court. In the case of Palatine Insurance Company v. Santa Fe Mercantile Company, 13 N. M. 241, the court said: '

"The court is under no obligation in a civil case to instruct the jury unless requested so to do; and hence the fact that an instruction is insufficient is not available error unless 'a sufficient instruction was requested.”

3 The second assignment of error is the only one in this casé that can be considered by the court. This assignment of error is the general assignment that the verdict- of the jury and the judgment thereon are contrary to the evidence in the case. Under this assignment the only question which can be considered is whether there is any substantial evidence to support the verdict.

Appellee, the plaintiff below, sued to recover balance due on a contract to cut and stack hay, claiming to have cut and stacked 372 tons at an agreed price of $2.00 per ton. He admitted payments, as appears from the evidence, to the amount of $397.95. Defendant admitted that the contract was entered into at $2.00 per tonj but denied that more than 282.69 tons were cut and stacked. He further answered, claiming a payment of $71.30 upon an order which he claimed to have paid, which order he claimed had been previously accepted by plaintiff below. By way of counter-claim he set up certain claims for damages arising from the negligenqe and carelessness of the plaintiff in the manner in which the work of cutting and stacking had been done by the plaintiff, and further claimed two items of $7.55 and $5.72, moneys paid out to repair machinery used by the plaintiff, and other incidental matters. The evidence discloses the fact that the $71.30 item is disputed by the plaintiff,- as well as the items of damage. Plaintiff did not, however, dispute the two items of $7.55 and $5.72. From this it appears- that there were undisputed credits to the total amount of $411.22. Plaintiff and defendant both stated that' when the contract was made it was understood that the hay was to be measured in stacks after settling for at least thirty days, but that no rule of measurement had been incorporated in their contract. Chapter 34 of the Session Laws of 1901, provides a rule for the measurement of hay in stack. The act follows :

“An Act to establish a legal method of measuring hay.”
“Section 1. The following rule and method of measnring loose hay in the stack and specifying .the cubical contents of a ton of loose hay, is hereby established.
"Sec. 2. Measure the stack for length, width and the ‘over/ to get the ‘over’ throw .a tape line over the stack at an average place, 'from ground to ground, drawing it tightly. Multiply the width by the over and divide the result by four. Multiply result of division by the length, for approximate cubical contents of stack. To reduce to tons for hay that has stood in stack' less than twenty days, divide cubical contents by 512, for more than twenty days and less than sixty days, divide cubical contents by 422, for more than sixty dajrs divide cubical contents by 380.”

2 In the absence óf any agreement as to the method of measurement between the parties, the rule laid down and the method of measurement laid down in the statute would undoubtedly apply.

An examination of the evidence shows that the plaintiff adopted a different rule from the one prescribed by the territorial statute in .his computations, and-that the defendant claimed that the territorial rule should apply. Both parties used the same stack measurements but an examination of the record fails to disclose what these stack measurements were. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $228.20. The determination of the question as to whether there is substantial evidence to support the verdict now becomes merely a matter of computation. In making this computation every doubtful item by way of credit claimed by the defendant must be resolved in favor of the plaintiff. Keeping this in mind, and considering only the admitted items of credit which are to be deducted from plaintiff’s claim, we fi^d that the plaintiff claimed damages for 372 tons of hay at $2.00 per ton, giving a total of $744; that in making this computation he did not use the territorial rule of measurement. In as much as the record, does not show the actual measurements of the stack it now becomes a question of how we can determine the exact number of tons of hay in the stacks, using the territorial rule of measurement. It becomes merely a simple problem in proportion based upon random figures worked out under both rules. Taking- for example the following random figures:

“Length of stack, 30 feet, breadth, 20 feet, overcast, 30 feet.”

The plaintiff in making his figures used one-third of the overcast as the correct height of the stacks; stating this as a formula, we have:

Overcast 30 (Breadth 20 x length 30)
3 Equals 15.8 tons:
380
Applying the territorial rule and stating it as a formula we have:
Overcast 30 (Breadth 20 x length 30)
4 Equals 11.8 tons.
380

Now, by proportion, we have the following problem: 15.8, the result of our random calculation under the formula used by the plaintiff, is to 372 tons, being the amount of hay claimed by the plaintiff, as 11.8, the result of our random calculations under the territorial rule, is to the amount in the stacks under the territorial rule of .measurement. To recapitulate, it then becomes 15.8 : 372:: 11.8 :N. This being solved gives us 277.78 tons. The question then becomes one of arithmetic. -The total hay in the stack, 277.78 tons, at $2.00 a ton, gives us the total contract price for cutting and stacking hay, $555.56. The undisputed credits to be deducted therefrom are $411.22. Substract this amount from the total contract price and we have the maximum verdict that could have been found in favor of the plaintiff, $144.24.

It therefore appears that there is no evidence to support a verdict for more than $144.26, and to the extent that the verdict found by the jury exceeds that amount, it is contrary to the evidence.

The remaining assignments of error are subject to the same objection as the first assignment of error discussed herein and will not be considered by this court.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Rockafellow v. New Mexico State Tribune Co.
397 P.2d 303 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1964)
Gerrard v. Harvey & Newman Drilling Company
282 P.2d 1105 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1955)
Roberson v. Bondurant
73 P.2d 321 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1937)
Kershner v. Trinidad Mill. & Min. Co.
189 P. 658 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1920)
Fullen v. Fullen
159 P. 952 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1916)
Field v. Hudson
20 N.M. 178 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1915)
Gallup Electric Light Co. v. Pacific Improvement Co.
16 N.M. 279 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1911)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
110 P. 601, 15 N.M. 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-v-tabor-nm-1910.