Nicholson v. Jones

242 P.2d 582, 194 Or. 406, 1952 Ore. LEXIS 186
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 26, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 242 P.2d 582 (Nicholson v. Jones) 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
Nicholson v. Jones, 242 P.2d 582, 194 Or. 406, 1952 Ore. LEXIS 186 (Or. 1952).

Opinion

LUSK, J.

This was an action to recover damages for breach of a contract to sell and deliver logs. Plaintiff, purchaser in the contract, had a verdict and judgment from which the defendant has appealed. There is no bill of exceptions, and we are therefore limited in our consideration of the case to the question of the sufficiency of the pleadings. St. Clair v. Jelinek, 187 Or 151, 157, 210 P2d 568, and cases there cited; Bridges v. Multnomah County, 92 Or 214, 216, 180 P 505.

The amended complaint on which the case was tried contains three causes of action, but it is only the first cause of action which the defendant has challenged. Omitting formal portions, the first cause of action reads:

“I
“That on or about the 16th day of May the defendant and plaintiff entered into a written agreement wherein and whereby the defendant was to furnish a minimum of 50,000 feet of logs each week commencing June 1, 1949, at and for the agreed price of $19.00 per thousand board feet for all pine logs and $14.00 per thousand board feet for all fir logs delivered by the defendant. A true copy of *409 said agreement is attached hereto marked Plaintiff’s ‘Exhibit A,’ incorporated by this reference and made a part hereof the same as though set out in detail herein.
“II
“That said logs were to be delivered for said price at the roll ways of plaintiff’s mill located on the defendant’s property. That pursuant to said contract, the defendant delivered at the roll ways 343,487 board feet between the dates of June 1, 1949, and December 1,1949. That during said time, under the terms of the contract, the defendant should have furnished to the plaintiff a minimum of 1,200,000 board feet of logs, and that plaintiff was at all times ready, able and willing to receive and cut the said minimum of 50,000 board feet of logs per week as in said contract provided.
“Ill
“That defendant, though often demanded by the plaintiff to furnish the minimum footage required under the contract, failed, refused and neglected so to do.
“IV
“That plaintiff’s profit over and above all expenses for logs so delivered, based upon the net price of the logs actually delivered, was $18.00 per thousand board feet, and as a result of the foregoing breach of contract, plaintiff has been damaged in the sum of $16,065.36.”

The prayer asks for damages on the first cause of action in the sum of $15,417.23.

The contract, referred to in the pleading as Exhibit A, recites that the first party (defendant) is the owner of certain described land in Wasco County, Oregon, and of the standing timber thereon, and that the second party (plaintiff), the owner of a mobile lumber mill, desires to install said mill on the real property of the *410 first party and to purchase from the first party logs to be cut by the first party on the premises theretofore mentioned. It is then provided:

“The first party agrees that he will, not later than June 1, 1949, install said mill on the premises of the first party, and will pay to the first party in the manner hereinafter stated the sum of Nineteen Dollars ($19.00) per thousand for all pine logs and the sum of Fourteen Dollars ($14.00) per thousand for all fir logs delivered to the mill by the first party, such payments to be made on Wednesday of each week and to be based upon the amount of lumber cut by the second party from the logs delivered by the first party and sold during the week immediately preceding. Payments shall be based upon the lumber as scaled at the point of delivery and sale.
“The first party agrees to begin the delivery of logs to the mill of the second party as soon as the same shall be ready for operation and to deliver at least 50,000 feet of logs each week until all the merchantable timber on the premises above mentioned has been cut.”

For the purpose of determining the question here presented it is unnecessary to set forth the remaining provisions of the contract.

No demurrer or motion was filed to the amended complaint. The first attempt to question its sufficiency was by a motion for a new trial, based upon the ground, among others, that “the plaintiff’s complaint, in his first cause of action, fails to state a cause of action against the defendant.” This is no different than if the point had been raised for the first time in this court. In that situation “a complaint, however defectively it may phrase a cause, can turn aside the best worded attack. It is vulnerable to a postponed attack only as it wholly fails to state a cause of suit or of action, as the ease may be. When the attack is tardy, *411 everything inferable from the language actually used is deemed pleaded.” McDonough v. Southern Or. Mining Co., 177 Or 136, 155, 159 P2d 829, 161 P2d 786, 164 ALR 788. In Booth v. Moody, 30 Or 222, 225, 46 P 884, the court, speaking through Mr. Justice Robert S. Bean, said that a verdict will cure formal defects in a pleading, and continued:

“ * * * The extent and principle of the rule of aider by verdict is that whenever the complaint contains terms sufficiently general to comprehend a matter so essential and necessary to be proved that, had it not been given in evidence, the jury could not have found the verdict, the want of a statement of such matter in express terms will be cured by the verdict, because evidence of the fact would be the same' whether the allegation of the complaint is complete or imperfect. But if a material allegation going to the gist of the action is wholly omitted, it cannot be presumed that any evidence in reference to it was offered or allowed on the trial, and hence the pleading is not aided by the verdict. The rule in such cases, as laid down by Mr. Proffatt in his work on Jury Trials, and which seems to have been adopted by this court in Houghton v. Beck, 9 Or. 325, is that ‘a defect in pleading, whether of substance or form, which would have been fatal on demurrer, is cured by verdict, if the issue joined be such as necessarily required on the trial proof of the facts defectively stated or omitted, without which it is not to be presumed that either the judge would direct the jury to give, or that the jury would have given the verdict’: Proffatt on Jury Trials, §419.”

See, also, Duby v. Hicks, 105 Or 27, 34, 209 P 156; Creecy v. Joy, 40 Or 28, 32, 66 P 295. The foregoing rules have been so many times announced and are so well known that it would be useless to multiply citations.

Defendant complains of three allegedly fatal defects in the first cause of action. The first consists of *412 a failure to allege a breach of contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
242 P.2d 582, 194 Or. 406, 1952 Ore. LEXIS 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nicholson-v-jones-or-1952.