Smith v. Billings Sugar Co.

94 P. 839, 37 Mont. 128, 1908 Mont. LEXIS 35
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1908
DocketNo. 2,514
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 94 P. 839 (Smith v. Billings Sugar Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Billings Sugar Co., 94 P. 839, 37 Mont. 128, 1908 Mont. LEXIS 35 (Mo. 1908).

Opinion

MB. JUSTICE HOLLOWAY

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action for damages for the breach of a contract. The complaint alleges in paragraph 1 the corporate existence of the defendant company; in paragraph 2, that the beet growers in the vicinity of the factory at Billings had not had any experience in growing sugar beets prior to 1906; in paragraph 8, that in July, 1905, a contract in writing was entered into between the company and this plaintiff, the only material portions of which contract are that plaintiff should plant a certain amount of land to beets during each year for five years, that the beets should be planted, grown, harvested and delivered under the instructions and under the general supervision of agents of the company. In paragraph 4 it is alleged that during the season of 1906 the plaintiff planted the required acreage in beets, and that he “otherwise fully kept and performed the conditions in said contract contained on his part to be kept and performed.” In paragraph 5 it is alleged that during 1906 there were not any laborers in Yellowstone county experienced in bunching, thinning, or hoeing sugar beets, except such as were imported by the company. It is then alleged: “In compliance with the provisions of said contract, the defendant company, by its agents and servants, instructed the plaintiff not to employ any labor which had had no experience in the' bunching, thinning, or hoeing of sugar beets, but to wait and accept the experienced laborers imported by the defendant company; that said defendant company, by its agents and servants, represented to plaintiff that such laborers would be supplied him in sufficient numbers and in ample time to properly bunch, thin and hoe his said sugar beets, and the plaintiff relied upon such representations of the defendant company and so waited.” In paragraph 6 it is alleged that the company negligently failed to supply such laborers until about June 20th, whereas they should have been supplied about May 15th, and that plaintiff did not know such laborers had not been supplied in time until it was too late. In paragraph 7 it is [132]*132alleged that the laborers actually furnished by the company were inexperienced; and that, although demand was made upon the company to properly instruct them, it failed and refused to do so. In paragraph 8 it is alleged that for the season of 1906 plaintiff’s land only yielded a small fraction over eighty-six tons of sugar beets, for which he received $257.03. The only other paragraph of the complaint reads as follows: “(9) That, had the defendant company, its agents and servants supplied said laborers at the time they should have been supplied and had properly instructed them in the bunching, thinning and hoeing of said beets, said land during the year 1906 would have produced 360 tons of beets in good condition of eighty per cent purity containing fifteen per cent or more sugar, for which the plaintiff would have received $1,626.05, pursuant to said contract.” The prayer is for $1,369.02, the difference between what plaintiff actually received for his beefs and the amount which he claims in paragraph 9 above he ought to have received.

To this complaint there was interposed a general demurrer, which was overruled. An answer was filed which admits the allegations of paragraphs 1, 3, and 8, and denies all the other allegations of the complaint. Some matters in affirmative defense were also- set forth. The cause was tried to the court sitting with a jury. A verdict was returned in favor of the plaintiff for $788.98, and judgment was rendered and entered thereon, from which judgment and an order denying it a new trial the defendant appeals.

The principal contention made in this court is that the pleadings do not support the judgment. The following instructions, given to the jury, will fairly indicate the theory of the case entertained by the trial court: “ (2) You are instructed that if the defendant company misinstructed the plaintiff in growing the said beets, and that the plaintiff relied upon such instructions and followed the same, and you further find that the plaintiff’s diminished yield of beets, if such was the fact, was due [133]*133to such instructions, then your verdict must be for the plaintiff.”

Among other things, the court in instruction No. 5 said: “There was no obligation on the part of the defendant to furnish laborers to cultivate, bunch, thin or hoe the beets of the plaintiff.” If the pleadings justify this theory, the judgment and order should be affirmed. If they do not, then there must be a reversal.

There cannot be any question but what under the terms of the written contract of July, 1905, the company was not under any obligation to furnish laborers for plaintiff to cultivate, bunch, thin or hoe the beets planted by him. This leaves but a single question for solution, viz.: "What particular term or terms of the contract of July, 1905, did the company breach, and thereby cause the plaintiff to suffer the damage of which, he complains ? It is said by counsel for plaintiff that the company violated those terms of the contract, which provide that, the plaintiff’s crop should be planted, grown, harvested and. delivered according to the instructions and under the general supervision of the agents of the company. It is said that this imposed upon the company an obligation to give proper instructions relating to, and exercise proper supervision over, the planting, growing, harvesting and delivering of plaintiff’s crop. "Whether this is the correct interpretation of those terms, or whether they merely gave to the company the option to give such instructions and exercise such supervision, is not of very much consequence on this appeal. For the purpose of this appeal we may assume, without deciding, that plaintiff’s interpretation is correct.

There is not any complaint made of any failure on the part of the company to exercise proper supervision as such. Instruction No. 2, quoted above, discloses the only complaint upon which a verdict for plaintiff could rest, and that is that the company misinstrueted the plaintiff as to the growing of the crop of beets, and, by reason of such misinstructions, the plaintiff was damaged. What are the misinstructions mentioned in [134]*134the complaint, and what damages are predicated upon the same ? In the brief of respondent-it is said that the complaint alleges two particulars in which the company was in default: “ (1) Negligently causing delay in respondent obtaining laborers. (2) Failing to instruct such laborers after respondent had requested them so to do.” These, then, form the respondent’s contentions in this court. But we think the first of these has no existence in fact in the record. We are unable, by any analysis we can make of the complaint, to discover this first contention. It is true the complaint alleges that the company advised the plaintiff to wait for the experienced laborers which the company would furnish; but there is not any suggestion in the complaint that plaintiff could have procured other laborers who could have done his work if this advice had not been given. On the contrary, the complaint does allege that there were not any experienced laborers in Yellowstone county, except such as were imported by the company. There is not any allegation that plaintiff would have suffered less than he did if the company had not given him the advice. Neither is there any claim that any damage resulted from the giving of such advice, or plaintiff’s acting upon it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 P. 839, 37 Mont. 128, 1908 Mont. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-billings-sugar-co-mont-1908.