Tingley v. Fairhaven Land Co.

36 P. 1098, 9 Wash. 34, 1894 Wash. LEXIS 251
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMay 26, 1894
DocketNo. 1177
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 36 P. 1098 (Tingley v. Fairhaven Land Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tingley v. Fairhaven Land Co., 36 P. 1098, 9 Wash. 34, 1894 Wash. LEXIS 251 (Wash. 1894).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Stiles, J.

— After the jury had brought in a verdict for the plaintiff, and answered certain special issues submitted [35]*35at the request of the defendant, both sides moved for judgment— plaintiff upon the general verdict, and defendant upon the answers to the special issues. The court denied the defendant’s motion, and granted that of plaintiff. Upon that judgment was entered, and defendant appeals. The respondent now objects to this court’s consideration of the case upon the ground of the insufficiency of the evidence, for the reason that there was no motion for a new trial made. This court, in Jones v. Jenkins, 3 Wash. 17 (27 Pac. 1022), impelled by the condition of our statute upon the subject of new trials and appeals, held that where a matter had been once presented to the court in the course of the trial for its decision, and the court had ruled upon it, there was no occasion for presenting it a second time in the form of a motion for a new trial before the right to have the ruling reviewed by this court could accrue. But we did not undertake to say that a final judgment of the court below should be set aside, and the cause remanded upon a ground which had never been presented to the trial court for its consideration in any form. The errors, objections and exceptions considered in Jones v. Jenkins were those which occurred during the course of the trial between the time when the jury was called and the time when it was discharged; but a motion that the court set aside the verdict of a jury on the ground that the evidence is insufficient is not based upon errors of this kind. It is by such motion that the court, for the first time, has its attention directed to the evidence, and it passes upon its sufficiency as a matter of law, and until it is moved and its attention challenged to the alleged weakness of the evidence there can be no ground to say that the court has erred in proceeding to judgment, notwithstanding the evidence may be insufficient.

Now in this case the plaintiff moved for judgment in the ordinary way, but the defendant challenged the general [36]*36verdict, urging that the special findings required the court as a matter of law to render judgment in its favor, thereby accepting the findings returned by the jury as the facts of the case upon the evidence admitted; and upon this motion the pleadings and findings themselves were all that the court was called upon to consider. A motion for a new trial upon the ground of the insufficiency of the evidence to justify the general verdict would not have been inconsistent with the motion made. Elliott, App. Proc., §§ 834-847. And, no such motion being made, we think the facts found by the jury should be taken as justified by the evidence. But, under the rule laid down in Jones v. Jenkins, we can still examine into the errors of law alleged to have occurred at the trial, including the motion for a non-suit.

The plaintiff sought to recover on certain contracts for the sale of logs. In the spring of 1890 he made a contract with defendant to deliver at its mill in Bellingham Bay one million feet of first class logs at $6 per thousand feet. One thousand dollars was advanced by the purchaser, and it was agreed that the balance of the price should be paid as the logs were delivered. It was also agreed that the defendant would buy all the logs that the plaintiff might put into the Nooksack river during the continuance of the contract, which was terminable at the will of either party, and pay therefor the sum of $6.50 per thousand feet, the plaintiff to deliver in the same manner. A further stipulation was to the effect that the plaintiff’s logs were or would be marked with certain brands, and that these brands should be registered and should be the property of the defendant during the continuance of the contract. It was also agreed that the ownership of the logs described in the contract passed forthwith to the defendant, and that, in case the plaintiff should delay in the delivery of the logs at the mill, the defendant might take the matter of de [37]*37livery into its own hands at the proper and reasonable cost of the plaintiff.

It will be observed that this contract contemplated no payment excepting the thousand dollars mentioned until the actual delivery of logs at the mill. During the summer of 1890 some seven hundred thousand feet of logs were delivered; but on September 3d a new contract was made without anything being said between the parties as to the termination of the first one. By this second contract the plaintiff assumed that he had afloat in the Nook-sack river logs with the same marks as those mentioned in the first contract, ‘ ‘ to the amount of say fifteen hundred thousand feet, more or less, ’ ’ and the body of the agreement was as follows:

“That the party of the first part [the defendant] agrees to buy, and said F. C. Tingley agrees to sell, said logs and assign and transfer the marks thereon to the party of the first part, who shall own and control the same during the pendency of this contract, for the price or sum of six and dollars per thousand feet board measure, straight and sound scale, for No. 1 logs, delivered at the mill of the party of the first part. Said Mundy, Gen. Man., agrees to pay or advance to said F. C. Tingley the price or sum of two and fifty one-hundredths dollars per thousand feet B. M., upon such logs, say fifteen hundred thousand feet, now in the river, and the balance of such agreed price upon receipt of the said logs. Said Mundy further agrees to further advance from time to time upon such logs as F. C. Tingley may put in, the sum of two and fifty one-hundredths dollars per thousand feet during the pendency of this contract, which shall continue in force during the pleasure of the parties hereto. ’5

The complaint set out the two contracts in full, and alleged that the plaintiff had put into the Nooksack river logs subject to the contracts to the amount of seven million feet, one million of which he claimed to be paid for at the rate of six dollars per thousand feet, and for the remainder [38]*38the sum of six dollars and a half, save and excepting one million five hundred thousand feet which defendant claimed to be missing, but which were to be paid for at the larger rate if the same were found not to be missing, but to be in the river or the booms at the mouth thereof. The further allegation is made that the actual amount missing did not exceed one million feet. The contract was also alleged to be still in force. It is next alleged that on or about November 20, 1890, the undelivei’ed portion of plaintiff’s logs were lying in the Nooksack river and in certain booms at the mouth of the river, but that there was difficulty in his delivering the logs to defendant’s mill because of the fact that two rival boom companies were in litigation as to which of them had right to boomage charges, pending which disagreement and delay in delivery the complaint alleges as follows:

“Defendant . . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 P. 1098, 9 Wash. 34, 1894 Wash. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tingley-v-fairhaven-land-co-wash-1894.