Mulliner v. Bronson

14 Ill. App. 355, 1883 Ill. App. LEXIS 200
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 22, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 14 Ill. App. 355 (Mulliner v. Bronson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mulliner v. Bronson, 14 Ill. App. 355, 1883 Ill. App. LEXIS 200 (Ill. Ct. App. 1884).

Opinion

McCulloch, P. J.

This was a suit brought by appellee against appellant to recover a balance due on a lot of lumber furnished under a written contract, of which the following are the material provisions: .Appellee was to set up his sawmill in the sycamore timber growing on the land of one Crank, on or about the 1st of October, 1881, and should saw for appellant, as fast as possible, two hundred and twenty thousand feet of sycamore lumber, one inch thick, of which one hundred and twenty-five thousand feet should be sawed thirteen inches wide, seventy-five thousand feet to be fourteen and one half inches wide, ten thousand to be ten and eleven inches wide, and ten thousand to be eight and nine inches wide; the lumber to be sawed at certain specified rates every month, and the whole to be completed, if possible, before the 1st of January, 1882; said appellee to furnish appellant with lumber clear of shakes, knots and heart, and without doty or rotten places, and to pile said lumber as fast as sawed on high ground, with four sticks to every course of lumber, and all the lumber to become the property of appellant as fast as piled and accepted. Appellee was to deliver to appellant, at his yard in Quincy, the said lumber after it had remained pilpd on sticks for six months, and appellant was to pay him for the same at the rate of nineteen dollars per thousand for the two hundred thousand feet of thirteen and fourteen and one half inches wide lumber, and at the rate of fifteen dollars per thousand for the balance; appellant to measure said lumber after it should be delivered dry to his yard in Quincy, and to measure such only as should be absolutely clear and would work into tobacco boxes. Ten dollars per thousand feet were to be paid appellee monthly as fast as good lumber should be sawed and well piled on sticks, and the remainder of the money to be paid to appellee monthly as fast as the dry lumber should be delivered in Quincy, six months thereafter, and measured up clear according to the terms of the contract.

Subsequently, certain provisions of the contract were waived by the parties, and by a verbal agreement it was enlarged so as to cover a larger quantity of lumber, but the prices were to be the same.

Appellee claims that he delivered to appellant two hundred and sixty-three thousand eight hundred and thirty-nine feet of lumber, and that this amount included three thousand nine hundred and forty feet of maple lumber, about which there is no dispute, leaving, in round numbers, two hundred and sixty thousand feet of sycamore lumber delivered on the contract.

On the other hand, appellant claims that when the lumber arrived at Quincy it measured up clear, according to the contract, forty thousand feet of the narrow kinds, and one hundred and sixty-one thousand five hundred and twenty-nine feet of the wide, which, at the contract price, amounted to $3,669.05, and upon which he had overpaid appellee the sum of $120.16. Appellee claims there is due him $1,088.96, but the jury rendered a verdict in his favor of only $570.80.

The contention between the parties relates mainly to the construction to be given to the contract under which the lumber was delivered. Appellant contends that appellee had contracted to deliver to him, piled at the saw mill, such lumber as would, when seasoned, be clear of shakes, knots and heart, and without doty or rotten places; that upon his acceptance of the same all the lumber so piled should become his property, but that the amount he was to pay for the same should be determined by the final measurement at Quincy after it had undergone six months’ seasoning at the mill; that in- this measurement he was to take into account only such as should be absolutely clear and would work into tobacco boxes, and that all that should not come up to that standard should be considered as waste, and not taken into the account in making up what was to be paid for.

On the trial in the circuit court, appellee’s counsel took the ground that, unless there was a custom proved which should control the language of the contract, if any portion of the lumber delivered by appellee to appellant under the contract was not measured or paid for by appellant, because he did not consider it to be of the kind or quality specified in the contract, and he appropriated the same to his own use, then he should pay for it what it was reasonably worth.

In this court they assume a somewhat different position and argue that the verdict of the jury may be supported upon the ground that even if all the lumber piled at the mill became the property of appellant, then he was to pay for the same at least ten 'dollars per thousand for all that he accepted, and for such as should measure out absolutely clear when delivered at Quincy, he was to pay the additional $9 and $5 per thousand feet to bring the same up to the contract prices. According to this interpretation of the contract appellant would have to pay $10 per thousand for all the refuse and worthless lumber there might be found in the pile, after undergoing tlie seasoning process, fin order to get the good lumber at the prices mentioned in the contract. We can not so construe the contract. What appellant contracted for was clear lumber to be used for a specific purpose, and its fitness was to be determined when the lumber in the pile should be delivered at his yard in Quincy, after undergoing a process of seasoning. From the language of the contract itself it is to be inferred that both parties understood that some lumber might be sent to appellant which would not come up to the requirements of the contract, and such was not to be measured nor was it to be reckoned in making up the sum which appellant was to pay. No lumber was purchased to be paid for at $10 per thousand, nor does the contract provide, that such as should be rejected should either be returned to appellee or paid for at what it should prove to be reasonably worth.

The contract does not provide that appellant should pay $10 per thousand feet upon the lumber that appellee should send to appellant’s yards at Quincy, but that $10 per thousand should be paid monthly as fast as good lumber should be sawed and piled. It further provides that all the lumber should become the property of appellant as fast as piled and accepted. While this acceptance by appellant operated to vest the title in him as to all the lumber in the pile, and entitled appellee to his $10 per thousand feet for the same, yet the amount that appellant was ultimately to pay for the same was left to be determined by the amount of clear lumber it should yield when delivered dry at his yard in Quincy.

If all the lumber in the pile was sold at a minimum price of $10 per thousand feet, with the prospect of appellee’s realizing $15 and $19 per thousand upon the greater portion of it, then he was guilty of the folly of selling out about ten per cent, of the very worst of the lumber before shipment, when by sending itto appellant’s yard in Quincy be could have demanded $10 per thousand for all of it. But if on the other hand such of the lumber as did not meet the requirements of the contract was to be regarded as waste and of no value to either party, then appellee could save the cost of transportation by culling it out before shipment, and at the same time appellant would suffer no damage. In this respect, therefore, appellee by his own acts seems to have put a construction upon the contract which fully accords with our understanding of its language.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Ill. App. 355, 1883 Ill. App. LEXIS 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mulliner-v-bronson-illappct-1884.