Sempel v. Northern Hardwood Lumber Co.

121 N.W. 23, 142 Iowa 586
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 12, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 121 N.W. 23 (Sempel v. Northern Hardwood Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sempel v. Northern Hardwood Lumber Co., 121 N.W. 23, 142 Iowa 586 (iowa 1909).

Opinion

Weaver, J.

The petition alleges that in November, 1905, plaintiff entered into an agreement with defendant for the sale of elm, cottonwood, maple and birch logs, none to be less than eight inches in diameter at the top and none less than ten feet in length, said logs to be delivered on the river bank on plaintiff’s land, and to be paid for by defendant at the rate of $5 per thousand feet. Under this contract he alleges that he delivered to defendant thirty-nine thousand feet of logs which defendant inspected, and then paid to plaintiff on the agreed price thereof the sum of $40, leaving a balance of $155 due and unpaid, for which sum, with interest, recovery is demanded. The defendant admits it entered into an oral agreement with [588]*588plaintiff to purchase twenty thousand or more feet of logs of the kinds and dimensions described in the petition at $5 per thousand feet delivered on the bank of the Mississippi River, but avers that said logs were to be cut from trees then standing on the land of plaintiff, and to be sound and straight and delivered on the river bank at a place where defendant’s steamboat could reach them, and before defendant’s sawmill would shut down for the season, and that said logs were never, in fact, delivered to or accepted by the defendant, nor were they at any time examined or scaled as had been agreed upon by the parties. The answer further alleges that in the month of January, 1906, plaintiff represented to defendant that he had cut and banked a part of said logs, and would cut and deliver all of them during the spring of that year, but that, after a part or all of said logs had been deposited on the river bank and before any of them had been scaled, examined or accepted by defendant, they were swept away by a flood and lost. By way of counterclaim defendant alleges that, at the request of plaintiff in March, 1906, it loaned to plaintiff the sum of $40, for which he agreed to account in the spring, when the logs should be delivered and accepted, and for this sum it asks judgment against plaintiff. Plaintiff denies the counterclaim. As will be readily apprehended from the foregoing statement, the central point of controversy in this case is upon the question whether there was a delivery — a completed sale by which the title to the logs had passed to defendant before they were carried away by the flood. All other matters of dispute may be treated as settled by the verdict of the jury.

So far as the testimony bears upon the agreement and intent of the parties concerning the delivery, it may be epitomized as follows: At the time of the contract, no particular trees were specified or pointed out. The species, dimensions, and quality were stipulated for, but the timber from which the logs were to be cut and put in shape for [589]*589sawing was standing in its natural condition, leaving it to the plaintiff to select therefrom and cut and tender to defendant such logs as he might claim filled the contract description. Referring to the agreement in this respect and the manner of its performance, the plaintiff testifies: “At this time the timber stood on my ground. I told him it had yet to be cut. I was to cut for him all the logs I could. . . . When I made the bargain to deliver the logs, it was said they had to be straight, sound and solid. We were to find out how many thousand I delivered so as to know how much money I was to get. We had to get them scaled. Kunz, Putnam’s scaler, the man over in Illinois we have been talking about, was to scale them. The bargain was made in November. I didn’t say a word about how much timber I had down there. I sold him all I could get out.” After saying that about the 1st' of March he went to the. defendant to have the logs scaled, but found it could not be done because his man had not yet got them all banked, and that some two weeks later, on again applying to defendant to have the scaling done, he was told that the scaler agreed upon was away from home, but would return about the 1st of April, when the matter would he attended to, he proceeds to say: “I wanted to have the logs scaled at that time to determine how many there were, and whether or not they were the kind I agreed to sell.” The defendant’s manager who made the agreement with plaintiff testifies that Kunz was named and pointed out at the time as the man who would scale and inspect the logs to determine whether they were such as had been bargained for; but this was not to be done until the logs had all been cut and banked. The defendant never at any time scaled or inspected them. As we have seen, the failure to have them scaled at the time of plaintiff’s first application therefor was due to the failure of his own employee to have the logs fuliy cut and banked. At the time of the second application, the scaler was away [590]*590from home, and, while there was some talk of employing another person to do it, nothing came of the suggestion. At or about this time plaintiff applied to defendant’s manager for money with which to pay the man who had cut the logs and received $40. There is a dispute whether this was a loan or a payment, but, as we view the case, the fact in this respect is not of controlling importance. Kunz returned about the 1st of April, but within a short time thereafter, and before the scaling or inspection had been attended to, the greater part of the logs had been washed away. Under this showing made by plaintiff and defendant, which is practically undisputed, we have to inquire whether there was a completed sale; or, in other words, in which party was the title to the logs at the time of their loss.

1. Sales: passing of title: This question is one frequently arising and authorities bearing thereon are very numerous. The precedents, English and American, are not altogether harmonious, but the general rules which obtain in this and many other jurisdictions may be considered well settled, though inconsistency in applying them to apparently similar states of fact is by no means uncommon. Broadly speaking, the question when the title fo personal property passes is dependent upon the intention of the parties; and, where there is any dispute as to the terms and material circumstances of the agreement, it is a question for the jury to determine. Where, however, there is no material conflict in the testimony or the terms of the agreement are admitted, the intent of the parties is ordinarily for the court to pass upon as a matter of law.

1. Same: when title passes. In the absence of a proved intent otherwise, a sale is not complete, and title does not pass so long as anything remains to be done between the parties. The article must be designated and its identity ascertained. If it be part of a greater mass or bulle, it ^ must be segregated or set apart. If sold by weight or measure, the quantity must be ascertained by the [591]*591usual standards. Ordinarily delivery to the purchaser is essential, though change of possession is not a universál requisite to a completed sale. These principles have been affirmed by this court in Cook v. Logan, 7 Iowa, 142; Courtright v. Leonard, 11 Iowa, 32; Snyder v. Tibbals, 32 Iowa, 447; Davis v. Budd, 60 Iowa, 144; Hamilton v. Finnegan, 117 Iowa, 623; Augustine v. McDowell, 120 Iowa, 401; Martin v. Lesan, 129 Iowa, 573; Harwick v. Weddington, 73 Iowa, 303; Mellinger. v. Hunt, 94 Iowa, 351; McClung v. Kelley, 21 Iowa, 509,

3. Same: delivery.

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Bluebook (online)
121 N.W. 23, 142 Iowa 586, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sempel-v-northern-hardwood-lumber-co-iowa-1909.