Snell v. Remington Paper Co.

102 A.D. 138, 92 N.Y.S. 343
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 102 A.D. 138 (Snell v. Remington Paper Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Snell v. Remington Paper Co., 102 A.D. 138, 92 N.Y.S. 343 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Hiscock, J.;

This action was brought to recover damages for the breach of a lumbering contract, and the referee before whom it was tried has awarded as such damages the profits which he has found plaintiff would have realized from sawing a certain quantity of logs each year for three years had defendant furnished said logs as agreed. We think that the decision of the learned referee rests in part upon erroneous views and conclusions and cannot stand, and we shall state somewhat at length the facts and reasons which lead us to this decision.

Plaintiff was the owner of a saw mill and defendant the owner of a large tract of timber land in the county of Lewis. The former and an officer of the latter came together and agreed upon a contract contemplating the disposition of defendant’s timber about as follows:

The latter was to cause certain logs, principally hemlock and spruce, to be skidded upon streams leading from its lands to plaintiff’s boom and mill. Plaintiff, at a price of thirty-five cents a thousand for driving and thirty dollars per year for placing the same in his boom, was to drive this timber down the streams to his boom and then was to take per year 2,000,000 feet of certain logs, cut it into pulp wood in his saw mill and place the same on board the cars [141]*141at a price of $2.50 per 1,000 feet board measure; also was to take certain other logs good for pulp wood and not requiring to be sawed from the river and place the same upon the cars at a price of one dollar per cord; also was to take all of the hemlock logs cut and delivered by defendant at $3.25 per 1,000 feet. The substance of these provisions is conceded. It has been further claimed by plaintiff in this litigation that the arrangements reached by the parties provided that defendant should supply to plaintiff 2,000,000 feet of logs to be sawed as above each year for a period of five years and that the hemlock to be purchased by him should be of merchantable quality.

The men who formulated this agreement were laymen and confidently undertook to embody it in a written contract without the aid of a lawyer. They succeeded in producing an instrument which is the basis of this litigation and which is so incomplete, inartificial and confused that it has been very difficult for the parties, their counsel and the courts to settle just what it means.

At the outset and as essential to enforcing his alleged claims, plaintiff sought a reformation of the written contract upon the ground that it did not, in accordance with the intention and agreement of the parties, provide that plaintiff’s sawing contract should last for five years and that the hemlock to be purchased by him should be of merchantable quality. Having secured this reformation, he then proceeded to urge as the substantial claim which has been allowed by the referee that the defendant furnished him 2,000,000 feet of logs to be sawed for only two years and made default for the remaining three, thereby depriving him of profits which would have been realized upon his contract. It is to be noted as giving rise to one of the questions to be hereinafter discussed that he has only complained because he has been prevented from carrying out this one provision of the contract. He does not find fault because he has not had an opportunity to do the other things provided in the contract.

Defendant’s counsel does not seriously contend that the evidence did not warrant the reformation of the contract specified, and there is no dispute upon the evidence that defendant did not furnish logs for the last three years of the term provided. The counsel does claim that defendant’s supply of logs under the contract was limited by or conditioned upon the amount which might be cut by one [142]*142Lamphere under a logging contract with it. We think, however, that the referee was justified in finding against this interpretation of the contract and, therefore, pass to a consideration of the rights of the parties upon the theory that this branch of the contract required defendant to supply plaintiff with 2,000,000 feet of logs to-be sawed and placed on board the cars each year for the period of five years at $2.50 per 1,000 ; that it failed to do this for three years and that plaintiff is entitled to'recover proper damages. The referee fixed these damages at $2,875.43, and this sum with interest constitutes the bulk of the judgment.

Proceeding upon the theory indicated and eliminating various other objections urged by appellant’s counsel, we still have left for consideration the questions whether the referee has correctly measured plaintiff’s damages under the sawing provision standing by itself, and, secondly, whether it was proper for him to determine plaintiff’s rights and profits under this provision alone rather than under all qf the provisions and engagements of the contract taken together, and some of which it is insisted would have brought him losses rather than profits.

In arguing the first question stated, it is said that the referee should have fixed plaintiff’s damages by finding the difference between the contract price of two dollars and fifty cents per thousand and the ordinary market price or value of doing such work as that in question, instead of by subtracting from plaintiff’s contract price the estimated cost which would have been incurred in performing the work, as has been done; also that even if this method adopted by the referee was correct, he has not properly or completely ascertained and computed the cost and expense which plaintiff would have sustained in doing the work and has, therefore, found a larger profit and resultant damages than were warranted.

We think that the first objection to the course pursued' by the referee is not well founded. There is no dispute about the general rule which covers actions for damages alleged to have resulted from a breach of an executory contract. Where the work to be performed or the article to be furnished has a well-defined current market value, the claim of the party in jured against the "one having defaulted is measured by the difference between the price contracted for and such market valuation or price. It is, however, an [143]*143equally well-settled rule that where there is no market price or valuation applicable to the article or the labor covered by the contract which may be used as a basis for fixing damages against a defaulting party, the party who has been injured may fix and determine his loss and damages by evidence of what it would have actually cost him to have performed his contract, showing in this manner the apparent profit which he would have realized. (Masterton v. Mayor, etc., of Brooklyn, 7 Hill, 61; Kelso v. Marshall, 24 App. Div. 128; Todd v. Gamble, 148 N. Y. 382, 390.)

It seems to us that upon all of the evidence presented plaintiff brought his case within the latter rule. Some testimony was adduced with reference to prices charged for" doing certain kinds of work somewhat similar to that to be performed by plaintiff in sawing these logs, but it is quite apparent that the value of such services was so dependent upon the circumstances of each case, as the amount to be sawed, the length of the contract, the extent to which the logs must be handled and carried and other things, that it would be unjust and improper to say that there was any general market price which covered just the particular work to be done by plaintiff.

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Related

Pearce v. Bond
71 Pa. Super. 501 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1919)
Snell v. Remington Paper Co.
115 N.Y.S. 1145 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1909)

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Bluebook (online)
102 A.D. 138, 92 N.Y.S. 343, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snell-v-remington-paper-co-nyappdiv-1905.