Morris v. CORCORAN PULPWOOD COMPANY

465 P.2d 827, 154 Mont. 468, 1970 Mont. LEXIS 412
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 24, 1970
Docket11626
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 465 P.2d 827 (Morris v. CORCORAN PULPWOOD COMPANY) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morris v. CORCORAN PULPWOOD COMPANY, 465 P.2d 827, 154 Mont. 468, 1970 Mont. LEXIS 412 (Mo. 1970).

Opinions

MR. JUSTICE CASTLES,

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment entered on a jury verdict after a motion for new trial was denied.

The controversy involves a dispute as to the amount to which the plaintiff ivas entitled under a logging contract. In May 1966, Plaintiff Rowland M. Morris entered into an oral contract with defendant, Corcoran Pulpwood Company, Inc., a Montana corporation (hereinafter referred to as Corcoran), to harvest a stand of lodgepole pine timber which had been purchased by Northern Timber Company of Deer Lodge from the Mount Haggin ranch. The timber stand produced two types of merchantable timber, saw logs and pulpwood.

A tree that would produce one or more sixteen foot logs (trimming allowance will not be mentioned), with a small end diameter of generally six inches, was utilized as a “saw logwith the remainder, if any, utilized in 100 inch “sticks” for pulpwood. A tree that was of a lesser size, but generally above two sticks tall with a minimum 4 inch top, was utilized for pulpwood; and certain smaller trees for car stakes.

The saw logs were delivered to the Northern Timber Company sawmill and were scaled at the mill. Payment to Morris in the year 1966 was on the basis of $17 per thousand board feet for cutting, trimming, skidding and decking. The mill scale at the mill was the basis for measurement. The Northern Timber Company was receiving its own saw logs, logged by Corcoran through Morris as a subcontractor.

The pulpwood was shipped by Corcoran to paper mills in Wisconsin by rail in 100 inch sticks. Each car contained varying amounts by volume and were not scaled until they reached the mills at their destination. Short cars and long ears were [470]*470used, but everyone involved used an estimate of 25 cords per car as a preliminary estimate.

Payment for the pulpwood for cutting, trimming, skidding, and decking was on a basis of $6.25 per cord. But, as will appear, the controversy arose over how much pulpwood was logged by Morris. According to Morris he was to receive $6.25 per cord measured in the woods; although he admitted that no one measured it. (More will be said later concerning Morris’ version). Corcoran’s version was that the measurement was to be based upon mill scale at destination.

Morris went to work on the Mount Haggin property in June 1966. He hired men on a piecework basis for felling, trimming, skidding and decking. Before any timber was produced by Morris; Corcoran advanced $2500. Thereafter, on the 5th and 20th of each month Corcoran would pay an advance to Morris based on Morris’ report of material produced. Morris operated on the Mount Haggin property until the end of 1966. At this time he still had wood in decks which had not been hauled by Corcoran. Corcoran was to do the hauling. In 1967 some of this wood was hauled out and the parties agreed it was to be computed on the 1966 terms. During 1966 Corcoran advanced to Morris the sum of $97,118.66.

Also during 1966, in addition to the pulpwood and saw log agreement, there were other oral agreements between the parties. Morris, through Corcoran’s Superintendent Delin, purchased a “slasher”, a machine used to “buck” the trees into saw logs and/or cordwood sticks. Morris could not finance the purchase on his own so Corcoran arranged for the purchase by Morris and deducted 50 cents per cord towards the purchase price. Morris was to do the slashing at $4.25 per cord. Morris did some slashing of his own production and of the production of two others. After some abortive attempts, Morris gave up on the slasher. Although he claimed and testified during the trial that he had an equity in the slasher,- he admitted when confronted with checks showing payment that [471]*471he had been repaid by Corcoran for all of his investment and withdrew his claim. Also there were agreements for cutting and providing car stakes for railroad cars, use of a “cat” on road work and surveys claimed by Morris. He first testified that they had not been paid. However, when confronted with cancelled checks showing payment, he admitted the claims had been paid and they were withdrawn.

At the end of 1966, Morris had felled an undetermined amount of timber, but had not skidded and decked it. No accounting was had between the parties. Corcoran’s position was that it had advanced more money than Morris had produced, since the wood remaining on the ground was not available yet.

At any rate, another oral agreement was made between Morris and Corcoran for the year 1967. The trees that had been felled but not skidded and decked in 1966 were to be skidded and decked at the 1966 price. The new work was on a different basis, Morris to fell and deliver to Deer Lodge pulpwood at $15.25 per cord and saw logs at $28.50 per thousand. Some of the 1966 wood was processed, but much of it remained on the ground.

In 1967, when this controversy arose, Corcoran had advanced or paid $141,331.59 to Morris, $44,212.93 of which was paid in 1967.

At pretrial it was agreed that the issues were:

(1) What has plaintiff earned for services performed for defendant?

(2) What is the present status of the accounts between the parties?

These issues revolved around two things in the main. How much wood did Morris produce and how was it to be measured? Many ancillary and really diversionary matters were gone into at the trial, such as the previously mentioned items Morris claimed were not paid for but then admitted had been in fact paid for. Counsel withdrew these items. Also much [472]*472testimony concerning waste, poor logging practices and other things were examined and looked into. Corcoran hired a professional forester shortly before the trial to go into, the woods and estimate, based upon some measurements and sampling, the wood remaining. This figure combined with the mill scales of both pulpwood and saw timber arc the figures relied upon by Corcoran.

On the other hand, Morris testified he cut a certain number of trees; he then used a formula to compute the number of cords. Morris testified from his scanty records which amounted to a ledger book with tallies of “log counts” for each man, felling or skidding. It was Morris’ contention that he was not to be paid according to mill scale; this, even though no other scale was used, made, or contemplated. He insisted that “log count” shown in his ledger was synonymous with “number of trees.” Herein lay the whole problem.

As to the word “count”, all of the witnesses agreed that in the logging business the term is a word of art; that is, it has a significance as a system of compensating a faller for falling large trees. The usual system of compensating fallers in pulpwood areas such as the lodgepole timber here was that one count represented a tree under 12 inches, double that, or two counts for trees 12 to 16. inches; and triple, or three counts for trees over 16 inches. A faller would receive 18 cents per tree if it was 12 inches or under, 36 cents per tree from 12 to 16. inches, and 54 cents for trees over 16 inches. Of this latter class, all witnesses agreed there were not too many. But, the fallers were paid normally thus in the industry and the defendant’s witnesses so testified in this instance, even though the particular tree cut might be measured eventually as “cords”, a volume measure; or “board feet”, a linear or diagram measure.

Morris’ tabulation of “log counts” totalled 135,127. Morris testified that the “log counts” were “number of trees”.

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Morris v. CORCORAN PULPWOOD COMPANY
465 P.2d 827 (Montana Supreme Court, 1970)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
465 P.2d 827, 154 Mont. 468, 1970 Mont. LEXIS 412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morris-v-corcoran-pulpwood-company-mont-1970.