San Miguel Consolidated Gold Mining Co. v. Stubbs & Jakway

39 Colo. 359
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 15, 1907
DocketNo. 5191; No. 2799 C. A.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 39 Colo. 359 (San Miguel Consolidated Gold Mining Co. v. Stubbs & Jakway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
San Miguel Consolidated Gold Mining Co. v. Stubbs & Jakway, 39 Colo. 359 (Colo. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bailey

delivered the opinion of the court:

On the 25th of July, 1900, defendants in error, plaintiffs below, entered into a contract in writing with the plaintiff in error, defendant below, whereby the plaintiffs agreed to furnish defendant with certain lumber for the construction of a flume under certain terms and conditions set forth in the memo[361]*361randum of agreement. By the contract plaintiffs agreed to furnish defendant with 6,000 lineal feet of waterway in accordance with the plans and specifications attached to the contract. This waterway was “to be equal in quality to a certain sample lot of said material furnished by said first parties to said second party in the fall of 1899, and now in use *■ immediatély below said second party’s power-house at Ames, Colorado.” Provision was then made in the contract for the furnishing of certain other lineal feet of waterway as above described. This is followed by the clause: “All of the above described waterway to be constructed of the heart of yellow pine from two inch plank not less than If inches thick and dressed on the inside.” The contract also provides for the furnishing of sills, posts, caps, heading and covering for the waterway as required. There is a clause in the contract which provides that time is the essence of the contract, and that, the liquidated damages for failing to deliver the material within the time specified should be $100.00 for each and every day’s delay to so deliver said material.

The plaintiffs furnished a portion of the lumber necessary to make the waterway. This lumber, however, was rejected by defendant for the reason, as contended by it, that it was not heart of yellow pine; the defendant contending that lumber made of the heart of yellow pine should contain none of that portion of the wood called sap, but should be exclusively heart, claiming that the heart of yellow pine, when used for flume purposes, would last for twenty years, while that portion of -the board which contained sap; being inore susceptible to decay, would last but a, few years, and that when the sap became decayed it would necessarily require the repair of the flume.

[362]*362About tbe 15th of September, 1900, there was a conference between certain members and employees of defendant company, one of the plaintiffs and a representative of plaintiffs, at which conference it was to be determined what should be done in the matter, defendant refusing to accept lumber which was not of heart of yellow pine, and plaintiffs confessing their inability to furnish lumber of a different character than that which had been supplied. The result of this conference was that defendant agreed to pay to plaintiffs $8.00 per thousand feet, board measure-, for the lumber which they had furnished, and to use it as a covering for the flume, and to obtain redwood from California out of which to construct the flume itself. Plaintiffs continued to- furnish the other lumber mentioned in the complaint.

Defendant obtained the redwood from California and constructed its flume. The flume as constructed cost about fifteen cents more per lineal foot than it would have cost had it been made- of the lumber which plaintiffs agreed to furnish. The defendant was unable to obtain the lumber from California within the time prescribed in the contract with the plaintiffs. As a consequence defendant was unable to complete the flume before the ground became frozen and the storms of winter commenced. Defendant failed to pay plaintiffs for all of the lumber which they furnished, and plaintiffs brought suit to recover the value.

Defendant filed, a counter-claim setting up the contract, alleging its violation and asking for damages because of the increased cost of the- lumber obtained from California and the delay in the.construction of the flume. The plaintiffs recovered judgment, and defendant brought the matter to the court of appeals upon writ of error.

'While plaintiff in error has made many assign[363]*363raents of error, we will discuss but a few of them, for the reason that, inasmuch as there must be a new trial of this matter, the questions raised by the other assignments may not again arise.

The defendant offered to prove the conversations leading up to the mailing of the contract; that plaintiffs were informed of the purposes for which, the lumber was desired, and that at that time there was some controversy between the parties as to whether or not the waterway should be made of heart of yellow pine;_ that plaintiffs desired to have the word “heart” stricken from the contract, but that defendant insisted upon its remaining. This testimony was excluded by the court upon the ground that the contract spoke for itself.

Upon rebuttal, plaintiffs were permitted to prove, over the objection of defendant, that the lumber for the waterway furnished by plaintiffs was as good as the sample theretofore furnished, and mentioned in the contract, and that that furnished contained as much heart of yellow pine as the sample.

In the third instruction to the jury given by the court, upon its own motion, it was said:

“Under this contract the plaintiffs were bound to furnish the heart of yellow pine for such waterway or flume-box, without regard to the question as to whether the sample mentioned was or was not heart of yellow pine. ’ ’

In the sixth instruction to the jury, at the instance of the plaintiffs, it was said, in effect: that the defendant could not recover upon its cross-bill if the jury should find that the material furnished by the plaintiffs was of the quality of the sample mentioned in the contract.

In the tenth instruction to the jury, given at the instance of the plaintiffs, it was said that if the defendant refused to accept the lumber delivered by [364]*364the plaintiffs, and the refusal had for its object the securing of redwood for said waterway on acount of its superiority therefor, and that said refusal was not in good faith because the lumber and material furnished by plaintiffs were not of the hind and quality mentioned in the contract, and that the lumber and material were • equal in kind and quality to the sample mentioned in the contract, then the jury should find for the plaintiffs upon the cross-bill.

In the first instruction given to the- jury upon the request of the defendant, it was said that under the contract the plaintiffs were bound to furnish the heart of yellow pine for the waterway, without regard to the question as to whether the sample mentioned was or was not heart of yellow pine. If there was any question as to the meaning of the expression “heart of yellow pine,” as used in the contract, the defendant ha.d the right to prove the circumstances under which the contract was made.

The situation of the parties at the time of the making of the contract, and of the property which is the subject-matter of the contract, and the intention and purposes of the parties in making the contract are often of great service in guiding the construction, because this intention will be carried into effect so far as the rules of language and the rules of law will permit. The party will he held to that meaning which he knew the other party supposed the words to bear, if this can be done without making a new contract.. — 2 Parsons on Contracts 500; St. L. & Denver Land & Mining Co., etc., v. Tierney, 5 Colo. 582; 2 Addison on Contracts 182; Emery v. Webster, 42 Me. 204; McPhee v. Young, 13 Colo. 80.

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39 Colo. 359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/san-miguel-consolidated-gold-mining-co-v-stubbs-jakway-colo-1907.