Pigg v. Houston & Liggett

8 Tenn. App. 613, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 185
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 3, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 8 Tenn. App. 613 (Pigg v. Houston & Liggett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pigg v. Houston & Liggett, 8 Tenn. App. 613, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 185 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

FAW, P. J.

W. B. Pigg brought this suit on April 29, 1924, in the chancery court of Lincoln county, against Houston & Liggett, a partnership composed of C. C. Houston and W. G. Liggett. Houston & Liggett, Inc.,,a corporation, and R. H. Harwell, a resident of Marshal county, Tennessee, were also made defendants to the bill; but the suit against the corporate defendant (Houston & Liggett, Inc.) and R. H. Harwell was abandoned before final decree in the chancery court. ■

The complainant sought an injunction and an attachment by his bill, but these features of the case seem to have been also abandoned below. At any rate, the Chancellor made no decree with respect to the injunction or the attachment, and no complaint of the decree has been made on that ground, either in the chancery court or in this court.

Complainant alleges in his bill, in substance, that, during the year of 1923, he sawed 455,610 feet of lumber for. defendant Houston & Liggett pursuant to an oral contract between complainant and defendant Houston & Liggett, by the terms of which contract defendant agreed and promised to pay to complainant for such sawing the sum of 75 cents per one hundred feet (board measure) of lumber sawed; that during the same period of time complainant had, at defendants’ request, paid out on defendant’s account the sum of $204.75 for labor employed in loading lumber on the ears; and that, after allowing all just credits to which defendant is entitled, *616 defendant is indebted to complainant in the sum of $2568.45, for which sum, and for costs, complainant prayed for judgment.

Complainant further alleges in his bill (as a statement of the terms of the aforesaid contract) that, a short time prior to January 1, 1923, R. H. Harwell, an agent of the defendant firm of Houston & Liggett, and acting in its behalf, “called complainant” and said to him, substantially, “what about getting you to do some sawing for me, I am behind;” that complainant expressed a willingness and ability to do the sawing, which was to be done at Petersburg (in Lincoln county), Tennessee, and complainant “entered into a contract at the time with the defendant Harwell, whereby it was agreed that the complainant was to saw the logs at Petersburg, at the price of 75 cents per one hundred feet board measure of lumber sawed, the defendants, through Harwell, agreeing to measure the lumber each day as sawed and keep the same mowed out of the way of the mill, the complainant to have the right to and to saw for his customers custom sawing as it came^to him in the meantime.”

Defendant Houston & Liggett, the partnership, answered the bill and admitted that, acting through its agent R. H. Harwell, it made a contract with complainant whereby complainant agreed to saw and convert into lumber some logs which defendant had purchased and intended to purchase in the vicinity of complainant’s saw mill, and which would be delivered on complainant’s saw mill yard, but defendant averred that said contract was made about the middle of January 1923, and not at the time alleged in the bill.”

Defendant denied that a contract was made between complainant and defendant as set out in complainant’s bill, and defendant averred that the contract made between complainant and defendant in January, 1923 bound defendant to pay complainant for sawing and converting the logs into lumber as measured, and shipped by defendant, and defendant denied that it was a part of the contract that the lumber was to be measured each day as sawed, as alleged in the bill.

Defendant admitted that it was a part of the contract that complainant would have the right to do custom sawing for other parties in the vicinity of his mill, if he so desired.

Defendant denied that complainant had sawed 455,610 feet of lumber for defendant, or anything approximating that number of feet, and denied that it owed complainant $2568.45, or anything like that sum. Defendant averred that it had overpaid complainant to the amount of $23.27 for sawing the lumber which had been measured and delivered to defendant for shipment, but defendants’ answer contains a further paragraph as follows:

*617 “It is true as alleged in the bill that there is still lumber cut by complainant for respondents on the yard of complainant, and this lumber may amount to 40,000 or 50,000 feet, and when the same is measured and shipped, complainant will be entitled to a saw bill on this at 75 cents per one hundred feet and for the sake of argument, granting there is '50,000 feet, your respondents would owe complainant on this lumber $375. And heretofore having over paid complainant $23.27, which should be applied ¡as a credit on the $375, would leave your respondents indebted to complainant in the sum of $351.73, and they here tender same with - this answer by certified check, stating to the court that if complainant objects to this tender upon the ground that it is not legal, upon notice of said objection, they will gladly pay the money into court.

Both the bill and the answer contained numerous details with respect to the mlaking of the contract, the things done thereunder by the respective- parties, and the amount of the balance due complainant as claimed by the parties, respectively, but we think we have stated enough of the pleadings to disclose the ultimate determinative issues thereby presented.

A considerable volume of proof, -with numerous exhibits,' was filed on behalf of the parties, respectively, and the case was finally heard by the Chancellor, when a decree, which embodied the Chancellor’s finding of facts, was entered as follows:

“This cause came on for hearing before the Honorable Thomas B. Lytle, Chancellor, etc. on the whole record in the case, including the pleadings, exhibits, and depositions of the witnesses, and all exhibits thereto, from ¡all of which the court is of the opinion and finds as facts the following:
“That on or about the first of the year, 1923, the defendants, Houston & Liggett, a partnership, through their agent, B. H. Harwell, contracted with the complainant, 'W. B. Pigg, for him to saw some hardwood lumber for them, the price of sawing to be 75 cents per hundred feet, the actual measurements of the boards or lumber to be taken as they came from the mill, the same to be measured each day by Harwell, as sawed by the complainant, and moved out of complainant’s way; that under this plan, ¡arrangement and contract, the complainant sawed for the defendants before the contract was terminated about the first of the year, 1924, three hundred and forty-three thousand one hundred seventy-seven (343,177) feet, amounting, at 75 cents per hundred, to $2573.83; that the complainant also paid out for the defendants, Houston & Liggett, the sum of $205.20 in cash for labor, etc. making a total accruing or due *618

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Bluebook (online)
8 Tenn. App. 613, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pigg-v-houston-liggett-tennctapp-1928.