Ramble v. Pennsylvania Coal Co.

47 Pa. Super. 28, 1911 Pa. Super. LEXIS 108
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 11, 1911
DocketAppeal, No. 9
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 47 Pa. Super. 28 (Ramble v. Pennsylvania Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ramble v. Pennsylvania Coal Co., 47 Pa. Super. 28, 1911 Pa. Super. LEXIS 108 (Pa. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Opinion by

Morrison, J.,

This is an action of assumpsit brought to recover a portion of a ten per cent reservation from the amount of money the plaintiff alleged he had earned under a certain contract with the defendant company. The court below granted a compulsory nonsuit and refused to take it off, and the plaintiff’s counsel excepted and took this appeal.

We deem it necessary to here state the facts. On October 26, 1900, the Pennsylvania Coal Company entered into a written agreement with Frank Rauschmeier, by the terms of which the latter agreed to cut, haul and deliver certain lumber and trees from the land of the company to the railroad. The term of this contract was three years. Payments for work done were to be made on the fifteenth of each month for all work done the previous month, except ten per cent of such work which was to be withheld by the company till the end of the term in October, 1903. On December 1, 1900, Rauschmeier, after doing a part of the work, by assignment indorsed on the contract, transferred the same to William J. Ramble, appellant, who carried on the work under the contract until August 3, 1901, when E. M. Beyea, designated as land agent of the company, notified Ramble that the company was dissatisfied with his work and the quantity of lumber delivered. Ramble went to the general office of the com[34]*34pany in Dunmore, which was in charge of E. M. Beyea, and told Mr. Beyea that the company had failed to pay according to the contract and that the company was about $4,000 in arrears. There was evidence for the jury that it was agreed by and between Mr. Beyea, land agent for the company, and the appellant, that the latter would assign the contract back to Rauschmeier and the company would pay to Ramble within a short time all moneys due him for work, and the ten per cent withheld as aforesaid should be paid to him in October, 1903, at the termination of the contract. On August 12, 1901, the said E. M. Beyea, by writing, granted permission to Ramble to assign the contract, and the same day the written assignment of the contract in pursuance of said parol agreement was executed and delivered by William J. Ramble to Frank Rauschmeier. After said last assignment the company from time to time, extending up to October 2, 1901, made payments to Ramble for moneys due him for work on the job prior to said assignment. On July 23, 1904, Ramble received through Rauschmeier $525, payment on account of the said ten per cent, and brought this suit on November 13, 1908, to recover the balance due Ramble from the defendant, including interest, amounting to $509.54.

As the assignment of the contract by Ramble back to Frank Rauschmeier is an important paper in the case, we here copy it entire:

“Hoadleys, Pa., Aug. 12, 1901.
“In consideration of $3500,1 hereby sell, assign, transfer and set over to Frank Rauschmeier of Mt. Cobb, Pa., all my right and interest in and to a certain contract, dated October 26, 1900, between the Pennsylvania Coal Company and Frank Rauschmeier, and by said Rauschmeier assigned on December 1, 1900, to William J. Ramble, his heirs and assigns, to be carried out by him as within provided; together with all the buildings and machinery, certain teams and wagons and all personal property whatever, located upon the lands of the Pennsylvania Coal Co., at what is known as the Foot of Old No. 16, also [35]*35Purdy town Road, Wayne County, Pa., as mutually agreed upon.
W. J. Ramble.”
In presence of Wm. J. Hand.”

It would seem that the assignment from Frank Rausehmeier to Wm. J. Ramble of December 1, 1900, with the written approval of the defendant company, vested in Ramble all the rights and subjected him to all the penalties mentioned in the original contract, and the contract from that date was wholly carried on between Wm. J. Ramble and the defendant company.

There is plenty of evidence from which the jury could have found that Ramble proceeded with the work under the terms of the contract and on August 6, 1901, he had earned about $9,633.47. Of this sum the company had, up to that date, paid to him $5,631.02, and there was yet due and unpaid by the company about $3,439, exclusive of the ten per cent reserved, which amounted to $963.34. Ramble claimed that of said balance of $3,439.13 a considerable portion had been due for several months, and the withholding of this money from him by the company had necessarily delayed the prosecution of the job.

On August 6, 1901, E. M. Beyea, land agent of the company, wrote the letter of that date which was in evidence at the trial, notifying Ramble that the company would exercise its option contained in the sixth clause of the contract, as follows:

“Clause 6th. It is also understood and agreed that if the said party of the second part does not fulfill this agreement in every particular, or fails to do the work to the entire satisfaction of the said party of the first part, this agreement becomes null and void after ten days’ notice from the said party of the first part to the said party of the second part. . . .”

On receipt of this letter Ramble went to Dunmore to the general office of the company defendant, in charge of E. M. Beyea, and it was agreed that the plaintiff was to [36]*36reassign the contract to Frank Rauschmeier and the company was to pay the plaintiff within a short time what was due him for all work done and to pay him the ten per cent withheld, on the work he had performed, amounting to $963.34, at the termination of the contract.

The plaintiff’s counsel do not contend that the oral contract with the land agent, just referred to, created any new liability on the part of the company. The money had been earned by and was due to the plaintiff under the terms of his employment. The agent asked that plaintiff assign the contract, to which the latter assented on the express promise that the company would not insist on a forfeiture of the ten per cent under clause six of the contract. The plaintiff’s contention is that he had performed the work and that constituted the obligation of the defendant to pay. By the oral agreement the plaintiff quit his job and the company agreed that it would not declare a forfeiture of the ten per cent under the contract. Pursuant to this oral agreement, E. M. Beyea wrote a letter which was in evidence giving the assent of the company to the assignment of the contract by the plaintiff, and on August 12,1901, the written assignment above quoted was executed by plaintiff and delivered to Rauschmeier. And thereupon the defendant company so far ratified the arrangement that it paid to the plaintiff the balance of $3,439.13 by sundry payments, the last installment of which was not paid until October 2,1901.

The plaintiff sought to establish at the trial that E. M. Beyea was the land agent of the defendant company; that he had full control over its lumber business, buying, selling, directing shipments, and generally superintending the lumbering interests of the defendant company. That having said power he could terminate any lumber contract, wholly or conditionally, for the company. We are of opinion that the money due the plaintiff was by reason of the labor rendered by him. Beyea, acting as agent for the company, sought to terminate the contract conditionally, upon stipulated terms. These conditions were accepted [37]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 Pa. Super. 28, 1911 Pa. Super. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ramble-v-pennsylvania-coal-co-pasuperct-1911.