Williams v. Crosby Lumber Co.

24 S.E. 800, 118 N.C. 928
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 24 S.E. 800 (Williams v. Crosby Lumber Co.) 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
Williams v. Crosby Lumber Co., 24 S.E. 800, 118 N.C. 928 (N.C. 1896).

Opinions

CLARK, J., dissents. The plaintiff sues to collect a balance due him on contract with the defendant, and for damages for breach of the contract. The verbal contract was for "large quantities of timber, growing and felled," on divers tracts of land on the Cheoah and Little Tennessee rivers and their tributaries. In his complaint the *Page 581 plaintiff alleges that, under a contract with defendant, he "cut and put a large quantity of logs into the Cheoah River, in Graham County, for which labor the said company partly paid plaintiff from time to time, leaving a balance of $500 still due therefore, which sum the plaintiff is entitled to recover, over and above any and all counterclaims and set-offs known to the plaintiff." The complaint also alleges that "the defendant, in 1893, pretended to sell to one Belding, one of the subscribers to its stock, all of its timber, cut and standing, and logs in the streams, with all its sawmill machinery, implements and utensils, at the insignificant sum of $100, while in fact this property was worth several hundred thousand dollars; that said sale and conveyance were inoperative and void, as being done without authority, and likewise fraudulent and void, as against creditors, for lack of valuable consideration and bona fides, and was further void against this plaintiff and its other creditors upon the actual intent which it had thereby to hinder, delay and defraud its creditors." It further alleges that "the defendants are nonresidents and cannot, after (930) due diligence be found; that he has taken out a warrant of attachment, and had the same levied, upon a large quantity of logs in Graham County, in the streams and outside, and on the standing timber on said sixty-nine tracts of land," etc. He then demands judgment for his debt and that the attached property be sold to satisfy his judgment. To this complaint no answer or demurrer was filed, and at Spring Term, 1895, a judgment by default and inquiry was rendered. At Fall Term, 1895, the inquiry was taken, and "by consent, the plaintiff having been allowed to so amend his complaint as to set up such claim as he may have against the defendant for damages sustained by him by reason of defendant's breach of its contract, and the defendant being allowed to answer, denying the damage alleged, and both amendment and answer being treated as in, without objection, certain issues were submitted to the jury," which, with the responses thereto, are as follows:

1. "What amount is due and owing to plaintiff from defendant on account of logs cut and delivered, and others cut and not delivered?" Answer: "Three hundred and thirteen dollars and twenty-five cents."

2. "What damage has plaintiff sustained by reason of defendant's breach of contract?" Answer: "Eighty-six dollars and seventy-five cents."

Judgment was entered for $400, with interest till paid, and interest on $313.25 from 21 August, 1894, till the first day of this term, and costs.

The plaintiff testified, over the defendant's objection, that he contracted to sell the trees, in parol, with John Swan, agent of the *Page 582 defendant company, and that he had cut, sawed and peeled large quantities of different kinds of wood, and had delivered 7,000 feet of poplar, of the lengths required by the contract, all of which testimony the defendant objected to, on the ground that Swan had no authority to make the contract, and because the contract was void under (931) the statute of frauds, the same being for an interest in real estate and not signed by the party to be bound thereby. The objection was overruled, and this evidence was allowed to go to the jury. The plaintiff also testified that he was damaged $500, in addition to the timber contract. No objection to the last evidence was made. Plaintiff offered in evidence a paper containing an account in favor of the defendant for articles sold to plaintiff, on which was a written statement, made by Swan, as to the price the plaintiff was to have for the timber when delivered. Objected to by defendant as evidence. The court admitted it, "with the remark, made in a very pointed manner, that he would allow the paper to be read and risk it; that when people contracted debts they must pay them." Defendants excepted. The court "made a calculation and statement of amount claimed by plaintiff as per alleged contract price, and as testified to by plaintiff, and handed the same to the jury, and told them that it was what the court had calculated to be due the plaintiff by defendant on the contract, but for the jury to make their own calculations; that they were not bound by his; that it was for the jury to say from the evidence what sum was due the plaintiff; that the plaintiff was entitled to the contract price, less the sum it would cost to put the timber to the river, where it was to be delivered. Defendants excepted." The court said to the jury that the plaintiff was entitled to damages, and the amount was for the jury to find from the evidence. Defendants excepted. The transcript in this case is not as easily understood as some we have, and we have copied several of its parts in order that we may arrive at it correctly, as near as may be. It may be observed that the defendant omits to answer or deny the allegation of the original complaint, in which the contract and part delivery of the goods are alleged; so these allegations stand undisputed and affirmed (932) by the judgment by default. The permission to file an answer to the amended complaint, as a count for damages for the breach of contract, was limited by the terms of the order to a denial of the damages for the breach, and did not extend to a denial of anything in the original complaint and judgment by default. The defendant offered no evidence denying the contract or damages, nor to the agency of Swan, as testified to by the plaintiff. He simply relied on the chance of discovering a mistake on the part of the court at the trial. He does not deny the allegations himself, nor use Swan as a *Page 583 witness, nor anyone else. He does not plead the statute of frauds, and he cannot avail himself of the statute without pleading, as verbal contracts are not void, but only voidable, at the option of the pleader. Curtis v.Lumber Co., 109 N.C. 401; Loughran v. Giles, 110 N.C. 423. In this connection it may be stated, to avoid misapprehension, that if the complaint alleged a parol contract for land, and the answer denied the contract and set up a different contract, the plaintiff could not introduce oral proof of his claim, if objected to by defendant, although the statute of frauds is not pleaded. Gulley v. Macy, 84 N.C. 434; Holler v.Richards, 102 N.C. 545. A contract required to be in writing can be proved only by the writing itself, not only as the best, but as the only admissible evidence of its existence. Morrison v. Baker, 81 N.C. 76. The Code, sec. 683, requiring corporation contracts exceeding $100 to be in writing, was repealed by Laws 1893, ch. 84.

The first exception, except as already noticed, is that Swan had no authority to make the contract. The defendant, having received and paid for a portion of the logs, as alleged in the original complaint, and not denied, and thereby ratified the contract made by Swan, is concluded as to his authority to make the contract. The defendant, in his argument, however, insists that the judge ought to have set out the evidence pertinent to the question of agency, and relies (933) on The Code, sec. 412 (2). So far as we can see, the evidence is all in the record before us.

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Bluebook (online)
24 S.E. 800, 118 N.C. 928, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-crosby-lumber-co-nc-1896.