Payne v. Amos Kent Brick & Lumber Co.

34 So. 763, 110 La. 750, 1903 La. LEXIS 704
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 27, 1903
DocketNo. 14,682
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 34 So. 763 (Payne v. Amos Kent Brick & Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Payne v. Amos Kent Brick & Lumber Co., 34 So. 763, 110 La. 750, 1903 La. LEXIS 704 (La. 1903).

Opinion

BREAUX, J.

This action was broughtto recover a balance of $3,033.33% due on a contract entered into between plaintiffs and defendants on the 21st day of September, 1900, in accordance with the terms and conditions of which defendants bound themselves to pay $5,000 after complete performance as required. Defendants, by way of reconvention, set up that plaintiffs broke their contract, and that in consequence they have sustained damages in the sum of $7,625.47, for which they claim a judgment.

The judge of the district court rendered judgment for plaintiffs in the amount first above stated, claimed by them, and, on the reconventional demand, defendants recovered judgment for the sum of $1,500.

Defendants are the appellants. Plaintiffs, admitting that there was some delay in delivering the machinery, claim to have performed all that should have been expected under the contract; that they delivered the work as promised by them; that it was accepted, used, and employed for the purposes intended; that a satisfactory test was made of the machinery.

Plaintiffs, in their defense in reconvention, urge that they were not put in default; that defendants’ letters only called attention of the plaintiffs to the fact that the contract had not been performed at the time stipulated, but not that the letters manifested any intention by defendants-to terminate the contract by reason of plaintiffs’ delay.

Defendants’ contention, on the other hand, is that plaintiffs bound themselves to make delivery by October 21, 1900, of the outfit, material, and appliances necessary for the construction of a Globe furnace kiln, complete; also two Graham’s three-channel lumber carriers and one sawdust carrier; also three of Graham’s hand-edged lumber stackers; also conveyors and chains — all as per specifications.

The capacity of the kiln, as set out in the contract, was that it would dry 40,000 feet of lumber, green from the saw, per day of 24 hours. Defendants state that the kiln and appliances were delivered by plaintiffs after the stipulated 30 days; that delivery in time was of the essence; that they waived nothing; that they only received plaintiffs’ work after they had given to plaintiffs notice of the damages they would suffer.

In reference to details, defendants particularly complain of the Graham’s three-channel lumber carriers sold by plaintiffs to them under the contract, as unsatisfactory and insufficient, and say that it was agreed that the carriers should convey lumber from 1 inch to 3% inches in thickness by 15 inches in width; that they did not carry lumber of that thickness. They complained of defective construction of nearly the whole outfit sold by plaintiffs.

Defendants admit that there was a test made of the.work, as alleged by plaintiffs, but only of one of the carriers, which was unsatisfactory, and that this test only served to demonstrate that it (this carrier) would not properly work.

Then, taking the position of plaintiffs in reconvention, defendants ask compensation ■for:

First. Destruction in value of 2,141,150 feet of lumber, piled in its yards, unavoidably, in an unseasoned condition, by reason of the breach of contract, amounting to $6,-123.47.

Second. By reason of stoppage caused by the failure of the carriers to operate as they should have operated, resulting in stopping the sawmill, for adapting radiators, and for rearranging channels and remedying defects in the stackers, $500 are claimed.

Third. Loss of orders in defendants’ business, caused by delay in delivering the kiln, and the impossibility of drying the lumber to fill the orders, for which an amount of $1,-000 is claimed.

Taking up the evidence of the case for its review, we note that it is generally understood that pine lumber, unseasoned, without passing through the kiln, stacked in large quantities, deteriorates. It becomes blue in a short time. It is not received in the upper grades of lumber, and in the lower grades it is open to objection. Customers of lumber esteem, above others, the bright stock, and generally purchase it. • It is usually preferred. The estimated difference in value, as [754]*754shown by the testimony, varies from $2 a thousand to $5; and that No. X common, while blue is admissible, it is not worth as much money on the market, by at least $1 .a thousand. It is also made to appear by the testimony that while there is a difference in value between dry kiln lumber and lumber that is allowed to remain exposed, that value cannot be ascertained by any fixed rule. Much necessarily depends upon the grade, the quality of the lumber, the stacking, the season of the year. The secretary, treasurer, and general manager of the •defendant company testified that they worked up much of this lumber. Some of it, because of its condition, was hard to work, and other portions are still on the company’s hands. In consequence, this witness inferred that defendants’ business for the year from .December 1, 1900, to December, 1901, •covering the period that defendants’ works are charged with having been defective and •deficient in defendants’ service, was $2 less a thousand than for the year previous, although prices had advanced. Something, during his examination as a witness, was said by this officer of defendant company about smoke-kiln drying, to which the company might have resorted to minimize the •damages. To which this witness replied that it was a crude way of drying lumber, and the lumber was exposed to great danger from fire; that he did not deem it proper to make any attempt to diminish his loss in that way.

Recurring to the asserted loss, it was ascertained, this witness informs us, by deducting the quantity sold from that which was stacked in his yard, and this in the yard served as his basis in arriving at the loss. It (the amount he claims) was an estimated loss of $3 on the gross, per thousand, between the kiln-dry and the air-dry lumber.

With reference to the second item for which defendants claim damages in reconvention, caused, as they aver, by loss of time, for labor in fitting radiators, and other items •of asserted loss — in amount, $500 — there were, unquestionably, delays. Plans were not sent as they had been promised. Alterations and changes had to be made in order to remedy ■defective conveyors, and other appliances failed to do their respective work.

In answer to questions, this witness (the general manager, before mentioned) replied in reference to this amount:

“I estimated that in this way: I took my pay roll, and endeavored to figure up, as near as possible, the number of hours we had lost; and I figured that we had — that my expenses were in the neighborhood of fifty dollars a day — and I figured that the aggregate loss of time was ten days.”

In regard to the third and last item which makes up defendants’ reconventional claim, growing out of loss of orders for lumber, for failure to deliver the kiln, $1,000, this witness testified:

“We had some orders that we had already taken in October for shipment in December or January. Those and a number of them had to be canceled.”

One of these orders was from the Pullman Company, and the others are also specifically mentioned by this witness.

The testimony of plaintiffs in reconvention sought to rebut the testimony of the manager, who was their principal witness to establish facts connected with the controversy.

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Bluebook (online)
34 So. 763, 110 La. 750, 1903 La. LEXIS 704, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/payne-v-amos-kent-brick-lumber-co-la-1903.