Lee v. National Box Co.

129 So. 638, 170 La. 1065, 1930 La. LEXIS 1865
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 2, 1930
DocketNo. 29500.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 129 So. 638 (Lee v. National Box Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lee v. National Box Co., 129 So. 638, 170 La. 1065, 1930 La. LEXIS 1865 (La. 1930).

Opinion

O’NIELL, C. J.

The plaintiff has appealed from a judgment rejecting his demand for damages for breach of contract. ' He contracted to sell, and the defendant to buy, a quantity of timber, “to be not less than 1,000,000 feet nor more than 2,000,000 feet,” to be delivered on the N. O. & N. W. R. R. between Rayville and Gilbert, La., or at such other place as the buyer might designate; deliveries to be made between the date of the contract, March 26th and November 1st, all logs to be inspected and scaled or measured by buyer, at the loading places on the railroad right of way every 15 days, measurements to be according to Doyle Rule. The kind of timber stipulated was gum, oak, elm, ash, cypress, pecan and sycamore, measuring 12 to 16 inches and up; and the price stipulated was $35 per M feet.

Lee commenced promptly the delivering of the logs on the railroad right of way, where *1068 they.were inspected, measured- and accepted by the box : company regularly, until the 2d day of September, at which time more than the minimum limit of 1,000,000 feet of timber, but not quite the maximum limit of 2,-000,000 feet, had been delivered. On that daté, which was 30 days before the expiration of the'dime limit for delivering the logs, the box company wrote k letter to Lee, viz.: “We notice by our figures that you have about completed your contract with us for timber. We are sending our scaler over in the morning to take up what you have delivered to the track, which we feel is all that we can possibly "accept on this contract.” Lee immediately notified the box company; on receipt of the letter, that he would continue the hauling and delivering of the logs until he had delivered the maximum quantity of 2,000,-000 feet; and he did continue hauling, and cláims to have delivered all of the 2,000,000 feet of logs before the term of the contract expired. The box company sent its log scaler out to the places of delivery, and, on the 6th, 7th and 8th óf 'September, he measured -and accepted logs which had been delivered previous to the 2d of September. He refused to measure 'á' number of logs which he claimed were 'not accessible, for loading on the railroad car's','and'demanded that Lee move them to an accessible place. Lee moved the logs, as requested, and the scaler returned and measured and'accépted them for the box company on the 30th of October, the last day before the expiration of the contract. Lee then insisted that the scaler should measure and accept the logs delivered subsequent to the'receipt of thé‘box company’s letter of the 2d of Séptember., The scaler communicated'with his company by telephone, and, on the company’s instructions, refused to scale any logs delivered by Lee after his receipt of the company’s letter of the 2d of September. The- -scaler- admitted in his testimony that there were at the place of delivery, on the 30th of October, 40,000 or 50,000 feet of logs which Lee had delivered subsequent to his receiving the company’s letter of the.2d of-September, attempting to put an end to the contract. Lee testified that he afterwardshad the logs measured, and that there were 162.000 feet of logs which he had delivered after the 2d of September, and which the box company had refused to accept. A witness for Lee testified that he (the witness) had assisted in the measuring of 30,000 feet of^the timber lef-t on the right of'way, and another witness testified that he had assisted in the measuring of one lot of logs containing 130,-000 feet and another lot containing 32,000 feet. Lee therefore sued for $5,600, being the value of 160,000 feet of timber at $35 per thousand. It was admitted in the defendant’s answer that the quantity of timber delivered by Lee previous to his receipt of the company’s letter of the 2d of September, and accepted and paid for by. the company, was 1.840.000 feet. Therefore, if Lee did deliver 160.000 feet of logs on the railroad right of way after receiving the letter of the 2d of September, and before the 1st of November,, and if the company was bound by the contract to accept all logs delivered during the term of the contract, up to the maximum limit of 2,000,000 feet, Lee’s suit for the price of the 160,000 feet of timber is well founded. 1-Ie tried to sell to other mills the logs which-the box company left on the railroad right of way, but there was no market for them in that vicinity, and so they remained on the ground until they rotted or were washed-away by floods. The evidence leaves some, doubt, however, about -the quantity of timber on the railroad right of way on the 30th of October, delivered by Lee after the 2d of September. Taking the admission of the box company’s scaler that the quantity, was 40,-000 or 50,000 feet, together with the-testimony *1070 of and for the defendant, that the quantity was much greater than 50,000 feet, we consider it proven that the quantity was as great as 50,000 feet.

The reason given hy the district judge for rejecting the plaintiff’s demand was that he (the judge) held that the contract was valid only for the delivery and acceptance of 1,000,-000 feet of logs, that Lee was not obliged to deliver any more than he saw fit to deliver, and that the box company was not obliged to accept any more than it saw fit to accept, of the second million feet of logs, and that the box company therefore had the right to quit receiving the logs at any time after receiving 1,000,000 feet.

The box company contends that the contract was null for the further reason that there was no stipulation as to how many feet bf each of the several kinds of timber, gum, oak, elm, ash, cypress, pecan and sycamore, should be delivered. The contract was not invalid for uncertainty in that respect, especially as the price was the same on all of the kinds of timber mentioned. Lee was bound to deliver, within the .time stipulated, and the box company was bound to accept within the time stipulated, any one' or all of the kinds of timber stipulated,' no matter how the several kinds might have been apportioned, provided, of course, that Lee was obliged to deliver at least 1,000,000 feet and the box company was not obliged to' accept more than 2,000,000 feet of the kinds of timber stipulated.

A contract for the sale of a specified commodity, where, for the protection of either the seller or the buyer, the quantity to be sold or bought is not stated more definitely than within a specified minimum and maximum limit, is not invalid for uncertainty as to the quantity. The rule governing such contracts is stated in 35 Cyc. 205, verbo. “Sales,” thus:

“If the quantity to be delivered is stated in indefinite terms, merely 'a maximum and a minimu'm limit being fixed, to constitute a sufficient delivery the seller must deliver at least the quantity specified as the minimum limit, and within those limits the buyer is bound to accept the delivery, but he is not bound to accept a delivery in excess of the maximum limit; and on the other hand the seller is not obliged to deliver in excess of such limit.”

The rule is stated by Mechem, vql. II, pp. 1023, 1024, §§ 1170 and 1171, viz.,:

■' “The precise amount to be furnished may also be left to.be determined by one of the parties; and his determination, when made and manifested, fixes the quantity to which the contract applies; It may thus be at the option of either to deliver or demand ‘up to’ a certain quantity, or ‘from’ one quantity ■ ‘to’ 'another, or ‘between’ one quantity and another.

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Bluebook (online)
129 So. 638, 170 La. 1065, 1930 La. LEXIS 1865, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-national-box-co-la-1930.