Smith v. . Holmes

83 S.E. 833, 167 N.C. 561, 1914 N.C. LEXIS 165
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 23, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 83 S.E. 833 (Smith v. . Holmes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. . Holmes, 83 S.E. 833, 167 N.C. 561, 1914 N.C. LEXIS 165 (N.C. 1914).

Opinion

Beowjst, J.

This is a civil action, brought by tbe plaintiff against tbe defendants, for damages for breach of contract for tbe purchase and removal of timber belonging to tbe plaintiff from a certain boundary of land described in said contract. Tbe defendants answered and denied that tbe terms of tbe contract were as set out in tbe complaint, but it is admitted that they entered into a contract with S. Montgomery Smith, brother of tbe plaintiff, whereby said defendants took over and assumed tbe performance of a contract that said S. Montgomery Smith bad previously entered into with tbe plaintiff, George Williamson Smith, for tbe purchase and removal of timber belonging to tbe latter. They set up, however, that they were induced to enter into this contract with S. Montgomery Smith by bis numerous false and fraudulent representations, both as to the quantity of timber on tbe lands described in said contract and as to tbe facilities for tbe removal of said timber. They also set up a counterclaim against tbe plaintiff, whose agent they claim said S. Montgomery Smith was in making said representations, and demanded an affirmative judgment against said plaintiff for a large sum of money as damages resulting from said representations.

As tbe plaintiff, under tbe rulings of tbe court, obtained a verdict upon tbe first, third, and fourth issues, and tbe defendant did not appeal, tbe only assignments of error necessarily relate to tbe second issue, as to damage.

Tbe plaintiff requested tbe court to charge as follows:

1. “Upon all tbe evidence in this case, tbe court charges you that you will answer tbe first issue ‘Yes’ and tbe second ‘$3,500, together with interest on said sum from 17 July, 1905.’ ”

2. “Tbe court charges you that tbe defendants, under tbe contract sued on, agreed to pay tbe plaintiff at tbe rate of $4 per thousand feet for all lumber cut and removed thereunder by 1 January, 1905, from timber on tbe railroad side of tbe boundary, and tbe amount so cut and removed should not be less than at tbe rate of 300,000 feet per month from 1 September, 1904, and in tbe aggregate not less than 1,000,000 feet by 1 January, 1905, and that they would resume tbe cutting after a suspension during tbe winter period not later than 15 March, 1905, and that they would cut at tbe rate of not less than 400,000 feet per month, valued in tbe contract at $4 per thousand on tbe railroad side of tbe boundary.

“Tbe court further charges you that tbe letter of tbe defendants to tbe plaintiff, dated 17 July, 1905 (tbe authorship of which is admitted by *563 the defendants), constitutes a breach of the contract on the part of said defendants, and there is no evidence in the case that there was any breach thereof on the part of the plaintiff or any act or conduct on his part which would justify or excuse a breach or an abandonment thereof on the part of said defendants.

“That there is evidence, construed most liberally and favorably for the defendants, tending to show that the date for the settlement for the stumpage by them was extended by the plaintiff to 1 July, 1905, but there is no evidence even tending to show any other alteration or modification of the contract; and the court charges the jury that, according to this agreement, there was due, on 15 July, 1905, to the plaintiff by the defendants under all the evidence in this ease the sum of $10,400, less the amount of any payments which had been made on said indebtedness by the defendants. That the only payments or credits claimed by the defendants is the sum of $2,100, and this is admitted by the plaintiff to have been made by the defendants and the Spruce Lumber Company.

“It follows that the amount due on 1 July, 1905, under the terms of this contract, according to all the evidence, was $8,300, and the plaintiff would be entitled to recover that sum in this action, but for the fact that he only asks for $3,500 in his complaint, and he is limited in his recovery to the amount so demanded.

“Therefore, the court charges you that the plaintiff, under all the evidence in this ease, is entitled to recover the sum of $3,500, with interest on said sum at the rate of 6 per cent per annum from 17 July, 1905, and you should answer the first issue ‘Yes’ and the second issue ‘$3,500, with interest, as stated,’ and you should not consider the other issues.”

His Honor refused to give the above instructions, and such refusal constitutes the only assignment of error in the record.

His Honor charged as follows:

“The law implies nominal damages from the mere breach of a contract. By nominal damages is meant 1 cent, or 5 cents, or 10 cents, or other such trifling and inconsiderable sum; and the court instructs you that if you answer the first issue ‘Yes,’ you cannot as a matter of law avoid awarding the plaintiff at least nominal damages under the second issue. Beyond that, the jjlaintiff would, in such state of the case, be entitled, as of right, to recover such substantial damages as he may have proven to your satisfaction, by the greater weight of the evidence, under the rule of damages which I shall state to you.

“The only aspect of substantial damages which you are entitled to consider in this case is that arising upon the plaintiff’s allegation that the defendants took off stumpage in excess of the amount paid for by them at the rate of $4 a thousand feet. Now, there is no controversy about *564 the amount of money which the defendants have paid upon stumpage account. It is agreed that that amount is $2,100. At the contract rate, $2,100 would be for 525,000 feet of stumpage.

“Now, if this evidence satisfied you by its greater weight that the defendants took off that boundary more than 525,000 feet of stumpage, it would be your duty to award to the plaintiff, under this' second issue, compensation for the excess above 525,000 feet at the rate of ’$4 per thousand feet.

“The plaintiff contends that the defendants took off stumpage to the amount of 1,133,047 feet. The plaintiff relies in this calculation upon the evidence tending to show the number of trees cut and the size of the trees cut, by a count and measurement of the same, and the plaintiff further relies upon the expert testimony of the witnesses who testified to their knowledge of such matters, that the number of stumps, of the dimensions given, would yield 1,133,047 feet.”

His Honor then proceeds to state the evidence of both parties claimed to sustain their contentions.

By this instruction his Honor confined the damages to the contract price for the timber actually cut and removed from the land. It is plain that there was such a conflict of evidence as to the quantity of timber cut and removed from the land that his Honor could not with propriety give the plaintiff’s prayers for instruction, and it is to be noted that there is no exception to any part of the charge as given.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 S.E. 833, 167 N.C. 561, 1914 N.C. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-holmes-nc-1914.