Orman v. Hager

3 N.M. 331
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 20, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 3 N.M. 331 (Orman v. Hager) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Orman v. Hager, 3 N.M. 331 (N.M. 1886).

Opinion

Brinker, J.

This is an action of assumpsit commenced in the court below to recover of defendant $1,050. The declaration alleges that on August 23, 1882, plaintiff and defendant entered into an agreement, whereby plaintiff agreed to cut, saw, and deliver to defendant, upon the line of the Texas, Santa Fe & Northern Railroad, in Santa Fe and Rio Arriba counties, 1,000,000 feet of sawed railsroad lumber of sizes suitable for use on said railroad, the contract to be completed on or before December 1, 1882; that defendant agreed to accept and receive from the plaintiff all of said lumber as fast as the same could be delivered to him, and to pay therefor $19.50 per thousand feet, payable on the twentieth day of each month, except 15 per cent, of the amount, which was to be retained by defendant until the completion of the contract, when it should also be paid. That on said day plaintiff entered upon the performance of said contract, and commenced work thereunder by procuring saw-mills and all necessary labor for carrying out tbe same, and furnished to defendant-feet of lumber, as required by said contract, and has always been ready and willing to complete said contract, of which defendant had notice, but that defendant, contriving to injure the plaintiff, did not nor would not perform his part of the agreement, but discharged the plaintiff, whereby plaintiff has lost the profits he would have derived from a completion of the work; that plaintiff was put to great expense in transporting, moving and erecting and taking away a saw-mill to and from the place selected by defendant for the sawing of said lumber, and in wages paid and board furnished divers persons, teams, and wagons employed in and about the cutting and sawing of said lumber, of which defendant had due notice, to plaintiff’s damage in the sum of $1,050, and concluded with the common counts. Plaintiff filed a bill of particulars of the items of his demand, among which was the following: Expenses from August 10 to August 22, 1882, waiting orders from Orman to set in canon near San Ildefonso, $438. The plea was the general issue. There was a trial before the court, without the intervention of a jury.

Plaintiff appeared as a witness in his own behalf, and testified as follows:

“On or about July 23, 1882, at the request of the defendant, Orman, who then had a contract with the T., S. F. & N. R. R. Co. to build its road from Santa Fe, N. M., to Espanola, N. M., I made a bid by which I agreed to cut and deliver to him on the line of said road 1,000,000 feet of lumber of the special kinds used in the building of narrow-gauge railroads, said lumber to be all delivered before tbe first day of FTovember, 1882, and for the price of $19.50 for each thousand feet of lumber so delivered. As soon as I had made that bid, defendant, Onnan, and I had a talk together as to my ability to manufacture and deliver the lumber as agreed upon, in which talk defendant agreed to furnish me with a permit to cut said lumber on government land near said road, and I then told him I had two portable saw-mills on sets near Glorieta, N. M., and that with both of them I could supply the lumber according to my bid. Thereafter, within an hour, defendant accepted my bid verbally, and concluded the contract, and I immediately started to Glorieta, where I had my saw-mills in use, and upon reaching there immediately started one of my saw-mills towards the timber tract near the line of said railroad company, and a few days after the first mill was so started I started the other and second mill for the same place. I set my first mill in this timber in Santa Clara canon, near said railroad line, and commenced sawing lumber on my contract with said defendant about the fourth or fifth of August, 1882. I had sawed on that contract about 45,000 feet of lumber with my first sawmill; and the second mill, the moving of which was in charge of a man by the name of Watkins, had arrived at and was then in the same timber, and near my first mill at a place called ‘ San Ildefonso Canon,’ and was ready to-set and go to work, when defendant came out to my mill in the Santa Clara canon, and informed me that he had turned over the lumber part of his contract with said railroad to said railroad company, and therefore would not accept or receive from me any lumber on my contract with him. I then applied direct to said railroad company for a contract for furnishing such lumber to it, and obtained a contract with it, but the only contract the company would give me was to furnish said company with two hundred thousand feet of lumber per month, which I could and did furnish with one saw-mill,—my first mill. The second mill was a necessity to enable me to furnish the lumber in the time and quantities specified in my contract with Mr. Orman, but was wholly useless and unnecessary to furnish the 200,000 feet per month necessary to be furnished under my contract with the railroad company. When said Orman notified me of his refusal to carry out his contract with me as aforesaid, I protested against his action, and shortly afterwards I saw him again, and told him of the best I could do in the way of a contract with the railroad, and requested him to pay the expenses of moving my second mill from and back to Glorieta, and he then agreed to do so, and, we being-then at Española, he agreed to come over the next day to see me at the place where my first mill was, and go with me to San Ildefonso canon, where my second mill was in charge of Watkins, and make arrangements to have the second mill taken back to Glorieta at his expense, where alone it was then useful to me. I waited four or five days at my first mill for defendant to-come, as he had agreed to, and as he did not come then, I got anxious about the matter, and went over to Española to find him and see what was the matter. When I reached that place I found that defendant had gone to the state of Colorado without leaving any word for me. I then immediately went to San Ildefonso canon, and told Watkins what had taken place, and made arrangements with him to take the second mill back to the place from which I had brought it, Glorieta. The actual expense of moving this second mill from Glorieta to San Ildefonso canon and back to Glorieta, to which it was taken, was $1,050, which I paid. This amount was the actual amount the said moving cost. Such expense was wholly incurred for the purpose of enabling me to carry out my contract with defendant, as above stated. This-second mill was of no use to me whatever away from Glorieta at the time-mentioned. Hone of the lumber agreed to be furnished by me under the contract with Orman, as aforesaid, was manufactured at the date of that contract, but it was all to be manufactured thereafter, and none of such lumber was the class of lumber dealt in by lumber merchants, but it was all of the-special kind and class needed and used in the building of narrow-gauge railroads.”

This was all the testimony offered in the cause, except a written contract between plaintiff and the railroad company, which appears-in the record, but whether it was offered in evidence, and if so, by whom, we are unable to say, as the record is silent concerning it.

Upon the conclusion of the testimony the defendant moved the court to dismiss the cause, for the reasons that the contract on which the action was brought was void under the statute of frauds; that all evidence introduced by plaintiff was illegal, improper, and irrelevant. This motion was overruled, and defendant excepted. There was a finding and judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $1,050.

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Bluebook (online)
3 N.M. 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orman-v-hager-nm-1886.