Rayburn v. Comstock

45 N.W. 378, 80 Mich. 448, 1890 Mich. LEXIS 660
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 2, 1890
DocketCase No. 1
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 45 N.W. 378 (Rayburn v. Comstock) 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
Rayburn v. Comstock, 45 N.W. 378, 80 Mich. 448, 1890 Mich. LEXIS 660 (Mich. 1890).

Opinion

Morse, J.

The plaintiffs entered into a contract with defendants, November 13, 1885, in which they agreed to go upon certain lands of defendants, and cut, haul, and deliver at the west branch of Hubbard lake, upon what is known as the " Lockwood Landing,” all the timber suitable for saw-logs, for the sum of $3 per 1,000 feet. From two to three millions of said timber was to be deliv[450]*450ered each year, until all was delivered. The timber was to be cut clean, and in a prudent manner, and all to be ■cut that was suitable for lumber or shingles. Said logs were to be well landed and on skids, and well rolled up. 'Supplies were to be furnished out of the store of defendants, and money provided to pay the men employed by plaintiffs, April 1, 1886, and the balance, if any, to be paid June 1, 1886, for the logs cut and delivered the first winter. The timber put in the second year was to be paid for April 1 and June 1 of 1887, as above.

The plaintiffs went onto the job in the fall of 1885, and that winter cut and delivered about two million feet, ■and were paid for it according to contract. The plaintiffs claim- that they faithfully performed their contract for the first year, and were always ready and willing to perform the whole contract, but that they were prevented from doing so by the defendants. They bring this suit, ■alleging a breach of the contract on the part of the ■defendants, and claiming damages for such breach. They ■also count upon an agreement with defendants in relation ■to picking up and gathering about 2,500,000 feet of saw-logs scattered around the shores of Hubbard lake, and putting them in booms ready to be towed across said ■lake. They allege that defendants agreed to pay them 10 ■oents per. 1,000 feet for such picking up: that they have 'Completed the work, and have not been paid. The declaration also contains a claim for $5,000, based upon the .common counts in assumpsit. The plea is the general issue, with notice of recoupment.

Hpon the first contract the testimony upon the part of 'the plaintiffs tended to show that the. first year they performed their contract, substantially, and that defendants settled up with them, finding no fault at- any time with the manner of their performance; that, when they were [451]*451ready to commence again, in the fall of 1886, and went to defendants for supplies, they were informed by one of the defendants, Andrew W. Comstock, that they could not cut another stick of timber upon the lands, — he calling up a clerk to witness that he forbade their going on with tlio job. They waited until about December 1, 1886, when they took another job, upon which they lost money. There was left when they quit, upon the contract, about 4,000,000 feet of timber uncut. The defendants’ measure showed 3,900,000. The plaintiffs testified that they could have put this timber in at $2 per 1,000, or at a profit of $1 per 1,000.

The defendants claim that plaintiffs did not properly perform their contract, in the following respects: Did not bank all the logs upon the Lockwood landing; did not cut the timber clean as they went; did not place all the logs on skids, and left over 3,000 logs in the woods, cut but not hauled, some being on skids, and some on the ground; that, by reason of the timber not being cut clean, the fire got in and damaged it, and that the same fire burned up and destroyed a large number of the logs left in the woods, and damaged those that were not destroyed. The defendants denied that they ever refused to let the plaintiffs go on with the job, and testify that, December 24, 1886, they served a written notice upon plaintiffs to proceed at once, and complete their contract. The plaintiffs admit receiving this notice, but say that they did not receive it until they had taken the other job, and were, therefore, not in a condition to go on with it. The plaintiffs recovered a verdict of $l,oj>0.

The defendants bring error, and claim, first, that, there being 4,000,000 feet of timber upon the lands after the first year’s work, the plaintiffs could not have completed the job in less than two years more, as the contract did not authorize them to put in over 3,000,000 in any one [452]*452year; that, as the defendants notified them in December, 1886, to go on with the job, the only damages they could recover would be what they suffered, between the time they were forbidden to go on and the date they were notified to proceed; and that, under the most favorable view, they could only get damages for the expenses of one year's delay, and the interest upon the profits of one year's work.

We think the court charged the jury correctly in this respect. He said, in substance, that when plaintiffs were notified to proceed with the contract, as no suit had been commenced at that time, it was their duty to go on with the contract, if they were in a situation to do so, and that, if the jury believed the testimony of the defendants, the plaintiffs were never prevented from going on with the job, they could not recover, in any event. This question was in dispute, and the jury evidently found with the plaintiffs. '

The testimony shows that plaintiffs, when this notice was served, had taken another contract, which employed all their teams and means. . Under their theory, that up to this time defendants had forbidden their going on with the contract, it was too late for this notice to have any effect whatever upon the rights of the parties. Certainly the defendants could not refuse to furnish supplies, and forbid plaintiffs cutting any timber on the land, and wait until plaintiffs had taken another job, and then withdraw their refusal to permit plaintiffs to finish the contract, and, by a notice to them to go on and perform, force plaintiffs to proceed, or lose all claim for damages thereafter. The plaintiffs had a right to take the refusal as it was given, and to seek other employment upon the' strength of it, and they were not obliged to break the other contract they had made in order to save their rights under this one with the defendants. In view of the fact [453]*453that the defendants went on the premises themselves in the winter of 1886 and 1887, and took off 500,000 feet, and let the contract to-take off the balance to one Mulvaney, in 1887, at $2.50 per 1;000 feet, we are satisfied that if it be true, as claimed by plaintiffs, that defendants refused to let them go on with the contract until they had taken another job for the winter of 1886 and 1887, plaintiffs were fully justified in treating the contractas broken by the defendants, and were authorized to recover damages for the breach of the same as if no notice to proceed had ever been served upon them.

The claim that the contract had not been fully performed by the plaintiffs the first year was, under the testimony, fairly submitted to the jury. There was a dispute as to the lines of what was known as the “'Lockwood Landing.” The plaintiffs’ testimony showed that a few thousand feet were piled beyond what Comstock claimed to be the line of the landing; the plaintiffs supposing the line extended further up the creek. After Comstock pointed out the line,' no more logs were banked above it. If the jury believed this, there was a substantial compliance with the contract in this respect.

Plaintiffs’ testimony also showed the timber cut clean, and in a prudent manner.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 N.W. 378, 80 Mich. 448, 1890 Mich. LEXIS 660, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rayburn-v-comstock-mich-1890.