Ortman v. Green

26 Mich. 209, 1872 Mich. LEXIS 187
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 23, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 26 Mich. 209 (Ortman v. Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ortman v. Green, 26 Mich. 209, 1872 Mich. LEXIS 187 (Mich. 1872).

Opinion

Campbell, J.

The controversy in this cause arises out of the alleged difference between the sealing of certain logs, on the faith [210]*210of which they were purchased, and the amount actually found by subsequent measurement and computation, on delivery. And the questions all turn- upon the effect to be given to the original bill of scaling. The contract was made June 25th, 1870, and the material part of it reads as follows:

“The said parties of the first part agree to sell, and do hereby sell, unto the said party of the second part, eighteen thousand nine hundred and ninety-two pine saw-logs, marked CW. S. G.,’ and banked in town fourteen north, range two west, during the past logging season, and measuring four million one hundred and fourteen thousand six hundred and twenty feet board measure, according to the scale on the bank made by W. L. Wade, of the firm of Sanborn and Wade, the same to be delivered in the Tittabawassee boom the present season, for the price of six dollars and fifty one-hundredths dollars per M. feet, according to the scale above mentioned; and the said party of the second part agrees to buy, and does buy, from the said parties of the first part all the logs aforesaid, delivered in said Tittabawassee boom, at the price aforesaid, according to the scale or measurement aforesaid, and to pay for the same as follows,” etc.

It appeared from the showing of plaintiffs below, that the logs scaled by Wade amounted to nineteen thousand and ninety-three, and the scale actually footed up four million one hundred and two thousand seven hundred and twenty-four feet, the contract having been made on an erroneous footing of the scale bill. It also appeared by the same showing that Ortman sold back to Green and Hardin, immediately, two thousand two hundred and fifty of said logs, at six dollars and- seventy-five cents per thousand feet, to be scaled in the water by J. A. San-born, one of the firm of Sanborn and Wade; and that on [211]*211such scale and estimates of Sanborn, the quantity in that lot was only four hundred and forty-one thousand seven hundred and twenty-four feet. If these were average logs, the deficiency would be nearly nine per cent, on the corrected estimate; and the loss on this particular lot of logs, even at the advanced rate of sis dollars and seventy-five cents per thousand, was more than one hundred and seventy-five dollars.

There was a conflict of evidence upon the point, whether the difference between a scale made on the bank and one made in the water, would account for such a difference in results. There was also a conflict as to the representations made by Green to Ortman, as to Wade’s competency, and the efforts made to secure an accurate scale from him; also as to Green’s personal representations and guaranties as to the logs holding out, and as to his agreeing to make up any possible deficiencies, both originally, and when the first deficiency was discovered on Sanborn’s measurement and estimate.

The court held that, in the absence of fraud, the parties would be absolutely bound by Wade’s scale; and that the variance found in the footings would not be material, unless the jury found it would, of itself, have prevented the bargain, if known at the time. There were instructions asked and refused on the subject of fraud and mistake, to which reference will be made hereafter.

There is one assumption, underlying the whole charge, which it becomes necessary to refer to in the outset.

The court, among other things, instructed the jury as follows: K The contract conclusively indicates that the parties negotiated about a certain lot or parcel of logs; that the plaintiffs undertook to sell, and the defendant to buy that parcel or lot; that that lot of logs had been scaled by Wade; and that his count and measurement, which consti[212]*212tuted his scale of the same, determined the number of pieces to be eighteen thousand nine hundred and ninety-two logs, and their contents to contain four million one hundred and fourteen thousand six hundred and twenty feet.” And upon this basis they were further instructed, that the defendant might show that, by Wade’s scale, the number and contents varied from this, but that no evidence could be received showing Wade’s scale itself, as actually made, to be wrong.

If the contract, upon its face, purported to sell an entire and known parcel of logs, at so much per thousand, to be taken at Wade’s measurement already made, the questions presented might perhaps differ somewhat from those now raised. The contract, upon its face, does not recite or show that the logs referred to in it formed one parcel, or were all the logs that plaintiffs owned in one place, or one township. It refers to a fixed number of logs, neither more nor less, and measuring a certain amount by Wade’s scale. There being more than that number, these logs could not be identified until delivery in the boom; and no title passed till delivery. Had the mistake in the footings-of amounts been the other way, aud had the amount in the nineteen thousand and ninety-three logs been in excess of four million one hundred and fourteen thousand six hundred and twenty feet, or had there been a still larger quantity and number both, Ortman could not have demanded it, and the contract would not have been violated by the refusal of either party to include the surplus. But if the-whole parcel was sold in bulk, the measurement being merely to ascertain the price, the count and measurement would have been immaterial for any other purpose. The difference in principle is a substantial one. In the one ease there would be a technical breach of the contract,, while there would be none in the other, unless, possibly,. [213]*213upon an implied warranty of dimensions. And the recovery in this case must rest upon either a substituted performance by a substantial equivalent, or on a quantum vale-'bat. As Ortman could not complain if the logs averaged properly, he could not decline acceptance of such logs as were delivered from time to time, without running the risk of assuming that those behind would not make up the deficiency. So far, therefore, as his rights may. have origiinally extended, to question the correctness of Wade’s scale, this fact would excuse any delay that occurred in complaining. It may be questionable whether the delay might not have operated differently, had the sale been of an entire definite parcel.

It is only by extrinsic evidence that it is made to appear that the contract referred to a particular lot of logs, and embraced substantially the whole of that parcel. In the light of that evidence the scale becomes of material importance, as designed by both parties to furnish a standard of computation; and, in the absence of any serious mistake or suspicion, it would, for that purpose, he the final standard.

To determine its force it is necessary to consider the circumstances of the transaction. If the parties had agreed on a sale before the logs were scaled, and had agreed that Wade should scale them, he would have been made their joint agent and arbiter, and it would be difficult to impeach any act of his, honestly done, for a mere mistake of judgment. But when these logs were measured, he was acting entirely as the agent of the vendors, and on their behalf. Under these circumstances, an offer to sell by his measurement already made, involves an assertion that he is in all respects a competent person, and that he has acted honestly.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 Mich. 209, 1872 Mich. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ortman-v-green-mich-1872.