Russell Lumber Co. v. Lambert

119 S.E. 117, 137 Va. 386, 1923 Va. LEXIS 163
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 20, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 119 S.E. 117 (Russell Lumber Co. v. Lambert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Russell Lumber Co. v. Lambert, 119 S.E. 117, 137 Va. 386, 1923 Va. LEXIS 163 (Va. 1923).

Opinion

Prentis, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

[388]*388The Russell Lumber Company, a co-partnership, hereafter called the defendants, complain of a judgment against them for $700.00 in favor of Thompson & Lambert, a co-partnership, hereafter called the plaintiffs.

The controversy arises out of a contract under which the plaintiffs were to haul logs cut from the woods of the defendants to their mill for manufacture into lumber by them. The proceeding was by attachment, which was levied upon lumber and other property of the defendants.

The claim was made specific in the petition as well as in the account filed therewith, and was thus itemized: $239.00, covering $1.00 per thousand feet due for logs already hauled (at $6.00 per thousand) which had been retained by the defendants pursuant to the contract to ensure complete performance thereof by the plaintiffs; $90.00 for cost of maintaining their two double teams for one^month; and $459.00 for lost profits at $17.00 per day, June 15 to July 15, 1921, during which period the plaintiffs alleged that the defendants had prevented them from performing the logging contract. The aggregate of these items is $788.00, which was the amount claimed.

The defendants answered, took issue upon all of the allegations of the petition, and asserted a counterclaim against the plaintiffs which is thus itemized in the account filed with the answer:

' “To amount overpaid on hauling of
lumber.................................................. $ 171.99
“To amount of damages for breach of
logging contract.................................. 200.00
“To amount of damages by reason of failure and refusal to log the timber as directed by said company, on account of which orders were can-celled-..................................................... 850.00
[389]*389“To damages by reason of the unlawful suing out of the attachment in this case........................................................ $ 145.00
$1,366.00
“Less amount retained by said company out of the logging that was done................................:..................... $ 239.00
“Balance due company.............. $1,127.99”

It is clear from the evidence that the defendants ■stopped their timber cutters and ceased to operate their sawmill before the logging contract was completed, but they claim that the necessity therefor was communicated to the plaintiffs; that by way of compensation for the loss of this work by the plaintiff they were employed and paid to haul lumber during this period, and that they assented to the temporary cessation of work under the logging contract. This temporary abandonment is conceded by the plaintiffs but there is a sharp conflict between them on nearly all of the other issues. The plaintiffs claim that when they had finished hauling the lumber the defendants had employed no cutters to supply them with logs for the immediate future, so that they could not continue to perform their logging contract, while the defendants claim that they were proceeding to perform their part of the contract when the plaintiffs, without just cause, sued out the attachment.

One of the assignments of error is thus stated:

“The circuit court erred in overruling the motion of the defendants to strike out all evidence of the plaintiffs as to profits fromlogging the remainder of the timber, and then permitting the plaintiffs to amend their petition, and thereupon refusing to continue the case on the [390]*390motion of the defendants on the ground that they were taken by surprise.”

This assignment is based upon three exceptions, numbered 15, 16 and 17, which severally show:

(a) “At the conclusion of the evidence in this ease, the defendants, by counsel, moved the court to strike out and exclude from the jury any and all evidence introduced by the plaintiffs on the question of what they would have made if they had gone ahead to haul the timber left standing on the Ireson boundary of land described in the contract in evidence in this ease; which motion the court overruled * * *

(b) “After the ruling of the court set out in the preceding exception No. 15, the plaintiffs,- by counsel, renewed their motion to be permitted to amend the petition of the plaintiffs filed on the 18th day of July, 1921, by striking out the following clause: ‘and the said failure of said defendants to perform their part of the contract, which is the cause of said damage to your petitioners, has extended from the 15th day of June to the 15th day of July, 1921, being twenty-seven work days during said time, and at the rate of $17.00 per day, makes a total damage of $459.00, which at the least your petitioners are entitled to and ought to recover;’ and in lieu thereof insert the following: ‘and by reason of said plaintiffs being wrongfully deprived of logging the remainder of the timber on the Ireson land, as set forth in the written contract in evidence in this case, which said timber is estimated to contain at least 400,000 feet, at the price of. $6.00 per thousand feet, after deducting therefrom the amount that it cost said plaintiffs to perform said contract, which amount is $459.00, and which said amount at the least your petitioners are entitled to and ought to recover.’ Which motion was resisted by the defendants. Whereupon the court permitted the [391]*391plaintiffs to amend their said petition as set forth above, to which ruling of the court the defendants, by their attorneys, excepted.

(c) “After the action of the court as set out in the preceding certificate of exception No. 16, the defendants, by counsel, moved the court to withdraw a juror and continue the case at the cost of the plaintiffs, on the ground that they are taken by surprise by the amendment and did not prepare and present the case with the expectation of meeting any evidence that would .be introduced under the theory of the ease presented by the amendment allowed by the court, which motion was overruled by the court, and to which action of the court the defendants then and there excepted.”

The record shows also that similar motions of the plaintiffs to amend their petition had been twice previously made during the trial while the testimony was being introduced. It was first made before the evidence in chief for the plaintiffs had been concluded, at which time one of the attorneys for the plaintiffs stated that: “He is not attempting to secure damages for the timber still standing there in the woods, but for the thirty days he was sitting there ready to haul and they wouldn't permit him to haul.”

The court, although it was conceded that if the amendment was then permitted, the defendants would be entitled to a continuance at the costs of the plaintiffs, overruled the motion, saying:

“I think that that amendment is of such character— of course if it had been made before evidence had been introduced and before the jury was sworn, I would have allowed it to be made. It is so material I don’t think the amendment could be made except on the condition you withdraw a juror and continue the case. I don’t think that ought to be done. The only way you could [392]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
119 S.E. 117, 137 Va. 386, 1923 Va. LEXIS 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/russell-lumber-co-v-lambert-va-1923.