L. B. Menefee Lumber Co. v. Gamble

242 P. 628, 119 Or. 224, 1926 Ore. LEXIS 223
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 3, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 242 P. 628 (L. B. Menefee Lumber Co. v. Gamble) 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
L. B. Menefee Lumber Co. v. Gamble, 242 P. 628, 119 Or. 224, 1926 Ore. LEXIS 223 (Or. 1925).

Opinion

BROWN, J.

The plaintiff is an Oregon corporation engaged in the manufacture and sale of lumber and other forest products. The defendant was engaged in the business of buying and selling piling under the firm name and style of 0. V. Gamble, Piling, Inc.

On June 29, 1921, the plaintiff, through its sales manager, C. L. Reynolds, wrote a number of circular* letters, one of which was addressed to the defendant herein. It reads:

“0. V. Gamble Lumber Company,

“Couch Building,

‘ ‘ City. ■

“Gentlemen:

“We have at our pole camps at Conser and Dever on the Oregon Electric, and Millersbury on the Southern Pacific, approximately 150,000 lineal feet of fir mining poles, 6" to 8" tops, 10' to 24' lengths. If interested in same, will be glad to quote you on one or more carloads. These poles are extra fine, thoroughly seasoned, and feel sure they would please your trade in every way.

“Tours truly,

“L. B. Menefee Lumber Co.”

On or about August 24, 1921, the defendant received an order from the Chas. K. Spaulding Logging Company “for 270 pieces No. 1 fir piling.” Thereafter, he called C. L. Reynolds, sales manager of Menefee Lumber Co., by telephone. Concerning this telephone conversation Reynolds testified:

*227 “He asked me if we still had some of those poles at Millersburg and he wanted to know if we thought we could get as many as 270' pieces, 21 to 84 feet, and I told him we could not, we had nothing but 24s, and even lengths. # * He said he had an order calling for 270 pieces 21 to 24 feet. I told him we could not furnish it. He said, ‘In order to comply with this technically, couldn’t you cut back a few pieces?’ I told him we would be willing to cut them back if he would pay us for it and pay for 24 feet, and he said to go ahead, and the order was accepted on that basis.”

On that same day, the defendants prepared the following written order in duplicate and forwarded it to the plaintiff company:

“O. Y. Gamble, Piling, Inc.

713-714 Couch Bldg.

Order.

Portland, Oregon, 8/24/21.

Order No. 508.

To L. B. Menefee Lbr. Co.,

City.

Ship to

Destination San Diego, Calif.

Yia

Terms, regular. Price, P. O. B. 72<¡¡ rate, San Diego.

Commission, None.

270 pieces #1 Peeled Fir Piles.

Lengths, 21 to 24'.

Min. Dia. at top, 6".

Please ship exact.

Shipment by next week.

Price: 10^ per foot.

Will furnish consignee’s name by Saturday, A. M.

If for any reason you cannot handle this order return to us in first mail. If you wish to accept this order please sign duplicate and return to us without delay. Send invoice and original bill of lading to us.

O. V. Gamble, Piling, Inc.

By O. Y. Gamble.”

*228 The plaintiff company altered the line quoted in the order reading, “Lengths, 21 to 24',” by striking out the words “21 to,” so that the same read, “Lengths, 24',” and thereupon indorsed across the face thereof the following:

“Will cut back a few pieces to 21, 22, 23 ft. and chg. you with the labor and for 24.

“Accepted,- ' L. B. Menefee Lumber Co.,

“By C. L. Reynolds, Secretary.”

In accordance with his promise to furnish the name of the consignee as stated in his written order, on August 27, 1921, the defendant wrote the plaintiff as follows:

“Please refer to my order #508 and 279 pieces of fir poles:

“Please consign them to Chas. K. Spaulding Logging Co., San Diego, Calif., on an order B/L. Notify DeWaard & Cobham, San Diego, showing Spaulding as the shippers.

“Thank you.

“O. V. Gamble.”

Gamble denies that he gave the plaintiff an order over the phone. He testifies that he called up the Menefee Lumber Company, as well as others, and asked for a quotation of prices, and that the only order that he gave the plaintiff was the order in writing. Among other things, the defendant testified:

“I recall calling up Menefee with every other firm I called at that time, as I had this order of Spaulding’s in front of me, and asked him for a price on those poles or piling.

“Q. Go ahead. What was said?

“A. And the Menefee Company said: ‘We haven’t anything shorter than 24 foot in that length. ’ I said, ‘Would you cut them back?’ He said, ‘Yes.’ ‘Well, *229 I will let you know.’ And I didn’t know until this bill came in how much it was going to be. * *

“Q. In other words, this conversation with Mr. Eeynolds might have taken place?

“A. Parts of it. I won’t question anything in his testimony except the fact that I didn’t want to buy mining props, and I never had any intention to buy them, and I never had any intention of trickery.”

Eeynolds admits that mining poles and props are not fit for piling, and, in testifying concerning plaintiff’s business relation with one Simpson who filled the order in question with mining poles and props, said:

“This man Simpson had a contract with us to get out ties. * * The pole business was a side issue. He made these poles out of the limbs and tops. * * He had a little sawmill and he was sawing ties, * * and anything that would not make those ties he made into these poles. * # The mines use these poles for temporary braces. * * They use them sometimes only for a few weeks and abandon them. For that reason they buy the cheapest grade of lumber. * * It is nothing like piling. Piling is sawed out of the whole tree and tapers, whereas mining poles * * would not be suitable for piling at all.”

The words “pile” and “piling” are authoritatively defined as follows:

“Pile. n. A heavy pointed timber forced into the earth to form a foundation for a building, wharf, or the like.

“Piling. The act or process of preparing piles and of driving them. Material from which to make piles, or that can be used as piles.” Funk and Wag-nail’s New Standard Dictionary of the English Language.

*230 Nobody pretends that tbe mining poles or props supplied through the plaintiff were suited for “piles” or “piling.” The consignee desired to purchase “peeled fir piling,” but peeled fir mining props or poles were supplied and the merchandise was rejected. The testimony shows that the term “fir poles” is often used to embrace “fir piles” or “piling,” but a “fir pile” is not a “fir mining pole” or prop.

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Bluebook (online)
242 P. 628, 119 Or. 224, 1926 Ore. LEXIS 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/l-b-menefee-lumber-co-v-gamble-or-1925.