Parker v. Selden

38 A. 212, 69 Conn. 544, 1897 Conn. LEXIS 86
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 13, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 38 A. 212 (Parker v. Selden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parker v. Selden, 38 A. 212, 69 Conn. 544, 1897 Conn. LEXIS 86 (Colo. 1897).

Opinions

Andrews, C. J.

The plaintiff’s cause of action was founded on the order contained in a letter from the defendants, as follows: —

“ Cobalt, Dec. 21st, 1893.
“ R. L. Parker, Esq.,
“ Dear Sir: Please cut out and have ready for spring shipment the following order:
“ 3,000 Horse R. R. ties, hewed 7 ft. long, 5 in. thick, and 5 in. face, @ .14 each, to be 2/3 chestnut and 1/3 oak.
“ 1,500 8 ft. chestnut posts @ 8 cts.
“ 2,000 10 ft. “ “ @ 10 cts.
“1,500 12 ft. “ “ @15 cts.
“ These to be of live timber, and to be from 4 to 6 in. at top end.
“400 cords clear oak wood @ $3.75.
“ 100 “ chestnut “ @ $2.50.
[548]*548“ 3,000 ft. 8 ft. 4 X 4 chestnut.
“ 3,000 ft. 10 ft. “
“ 4,000 ft. 12 ft. “ “ @ 18.00
“ All of the above order to be delivered over the rail of a vessel.
“Yours truly,
“ John Selden & Son.”

The complaint, after mentioning the order and alleging that the plaintiff received and accepted it, says: “ (3) Defendants did not take said wood and timber as agreed, but neglected and refused to take or pay for the same, except as is hereinafter stated. (4) Defendants did not take any of said timber or wood until a long time after the same was ordered to be ready, and what they have taken has been taken in small quantities and at long intervals between July of 1894 and July of 1895. (5) The following wood mentioned in said order has never been taken or paid for by the defendants, to wit: 1,200 horse ties, 300 cords of oak wood, 100 cords of chestnut wood, 4,000 feet of 4 by 4 chestnut sticks. (6) Plaintiff has been to great trouble and expense in cutting and carting said wood, and a large amount of horse ties and oak wood, which had been placed on the dock at the request of the defendants, ready for shipment, was, in consequence of the neglect of the defendants to send a vessel for the same for several months thereafter, carried away by the high tides and wholly lost; and defendants have called for the shipment of the different loads of wood taken by them at inconvenient times, many months after they should have taken the same, and thereby caused great expense to the plaintiff.”

The answer of the defendants admits the sending the said order and its acceptance by the plaintiff; and then goes on to say: “ (3) As to paragraphs three and four the defendants answer and say that they did not refuse to take the wood and timber as agreed, and that they took all thereof that the plaintiff had ready for spring shipment in compliance with said order, and paid the plaintiff therefor; but [549]*549that the plaintiff failed to have ready for spring shipment a large quantity of the wood and timber called for in said order. . . . (4) As to paragraph five the defendants answer and say that they did not take any of the wood therein mentioned, because the plaintiff did not have it ready for shipment as called for in said order. (5) Paragraph six is denied.”

These pleadings reduced the controversy of the parties substantially to this: What period of time was included within the expression “spring shipment”? The court found the issue for the defendants, and the plaintiff appeals.

The finding of facts is as follows: “ 1. Immediately after the acceptance of the order by the plaintiff, he began to cut the wood and timber therein mentioned, and before spring opened had a large quantity of the posts, ties, and wood piled upon the wharf at Guilford, so as to be ready for delivery upon boats when sent for the same. 2. On April 2d, 1894, the defendants sent the plaintiff two letters of that date.

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Bluebook (online)
38 A. 212, 69 Conn. 544, 1897 Conn. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-selden-conn-1897.