Sage v. Brown

34 Ind. 464
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 34 Ind. 464 (Sage v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sage v. Brown, 34 Ind. 464 (Ind. 1870).

Opinion

Buskirk, J.

This is an action commenced in the court below by the appellants, to recover from the appellee a certain amount of money advanced by them to him on a lum[465]*465ber contract, together with damages by them sustained by the breach of such contract.

The complaint alleges, in substance, that the plaintiffs and defendant, on the 28th day of April, 1867, made and entered into a written contract, by which the defendant agreed to-deliver to the plaintiffs, on or before the first day of October;, 1867, on the switch of the Peru and Indianapolis Railroad, atKokomo, one hundred thousand feet of sound poplar lumber, and to sell to them all the walnut lumber that he might: have to sell during the year 1867; that the plaintiffs agreed': to measure and receive such lumber as delivered, and to pay for clear poplar lumber sixteen dollars per thousand, thirteen, dollars per thousand for common poplar lumber, and for the-walnut lumber the fair, average market price at the time of delivery; that the plaintiffs advanced to the defendant,.at.the time of making the said contract, the sum of three hundred' dollars, and that they afterwards advanced thereon- the - further sum of two hundred and thirty-five dollars; that the. defendant had only delivered seven thousand one hundred' and forty-two feet of clear lumber and four thousand’ eight hundred and thirteen feet of common lumber, which; at the contract price amounted to one hundred and seventy-six dollars and sixty-nine cents; that the defendant had failed and refused to deliver any walnut lumber and the residue of the popular lumber; that the plaintiffs had been at all times ready and willing to receive, measure, and pay for such lumber according to the said contract, and to do and perform all the stipulations by them to be done and performed; and that they had sustained .damages in the sum of three hundred dollars by the failure of the defendant to deliver such lumber, in addition to the balance due them on the money advanced, for which sums they demanded judgment.

At the April term, 1868, the defendant filed an answer in two paragraphs. The first was the general denial; the second was in confession and avoidance. The plaintiffs demurred to each paragraph; overruled, and ruling excepted. [466]*466to. The cause was then continued upon the motion and affidavit of the defendant.

At the November term, 1868, the defendant filed another answer in two paragraphs, in substance the same as the one previously filed. ' The first was the general denial; the second was in confession and avoidance. In the second, the defendant admitted the making of the contract as set out in the complaint and the payment of the money as therein alleged, but he averred that immediately after the making of the said, contract, he commenced cutting, purchasing, and preparing timber for the purpose of filling and discharging the said contract'and all the covenants therein contained, to be performed on his part; that on the — day of July, 1867, he delivered to the plaintiffs, at the place of delivery in said contract mentioned, nineteen thousand seven hundred and sixty-two feet of clear lumber and two thousand feet of common lumber, of the quality and value described in the said contract; that he notified the plaintiffs thereof, and requested them to come to Kokomo and measure and receive such lumber; that he was notified and informed by the plaintiffs that he need not deliver any more of such lumber at Kokomo, unless he would permit them to ship the same to Peru, and there to measure and receive it; that he had been ready and willing at all times, and then was ready and willing, to deliver the said lumber according to the terms of the said contract, but was prevented from so doing by the refusal of the plaintiffs to measure and receive the same according to the terms of said contract; and that by reason of such failure on the part of the said plaintiffs he had been damaged in the sum of three hundred dollars, for which he demanded judgment.

We regard the answer last filed as a substitute for the first To the substituted answer the plaintiffs demurred separately to each paragraph. The demurrer was overruled and excepted to; this is assigned for error. The demurrer was properly and correctly ovérruled to the general denial. The.eecond paragraph of the answer admits the making of [467]*467the contract as alleged in the complaint, and then avers that the defendant was ready and willing to deliver the lumber according to the terms of the contract, but was prevented from doing so by the refusal of the plaintiffs to receive and measure the same at the place of delivery agreed upon by the parties. This paragraph seems to have been treated, in argument, as a plea of performance. - As such it would be clearly bad. To make it a good plea of performance, it should have alleged that the defendant had, within the time and at the place of delivery specified" in the contract, actually delivered the whole of the lumber. We regard it as a plea showing that the defendant was ready and willing to deliver the lumber, and that the acts of the plaintiffs excused him from making an actual delivery. The appellee had agreed to deliver, and the appellants had agreed to receive, the lumber on the switch at Kokomo.. The appellee was not bound to deliver at any other place, and if the appellants notified him that they would not receive it at such place, that would release the appellee from his obligation to deliver at Kokomo, on the principle that the law never requires a foolish or unnecessary thing to be done. There was no error committed by the court in overruling the demurrer to the second paragraph of the answer.

There was a trial by jury; verdict for the defendant, his damages assessed at five dollars; motion and reasons for á new trial filed; motion overruled and excepted to. There was no reply filed, but the objection was not made in the court below nor in this court, and is to be regarded as waived as to the former trial. The court gave the jury, of its own motion, five instructions. The appellants only excepted to the fifth, and the giving of this instruction is assigned fox-error. The instx-uction complained of is in these wox-ds:

“If you find from the evidence that the defendant was prevented from fulfilling his part of the contract by the plaintiffs, you should find for the defendant; and in this regard you may take into consideration, if you find any evidence [468]*468of the fact, the refusal to receive the lumber unless the seller, the defendant, would ship it to Peru for measurement.”

If this instruction stood alone, it might have misled the jury. The omission in this instruction is, that it entirely overlooks the fact that to make a good defense it was necessary to show that the defendant was ready and willing to deliver the lumber, and was either prevented or excused by the conduct of the plaintiffs from performing on his part. The court, in the second instruction, properly charged the law on this subject. The better practice is, to make every instruction full and complete within itself, so that the jury would comprehend and understand the law upon the point without having to refer to other parts of the instructions. Each separate and distinct proposition should be stated in separate instructions. But we are not prepared to say that the instruction in question, when viewed in connection with the other instructions, misled the jury.

The next error complained of is the admission of improper and incompetent evidence. It is insisted, in

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Bluebook (online)
34 Ind. 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sage-v-brown-ind-1870.