Wyman v. Carrabassett Hardwood Lumber Co.

121 Me. 271
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 1, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 121 Me. 271 (Wyman v. Carrabassett Hardwood Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wyman v. Carrabassett Hardwood Lumber Co., 121 Me. 271 (Me. 1922).

Opinion

Spear, J.

This is an action of trover for the value of a long list of articles of personal property alleged to have been taken and converted by the defendant company.

The alleged cause of action came about as follows: The plaintiff owned certain 'farms in Franklin County with camps thereon, together with all the personal property claimed in his writ. Through a real estate agent he agreed to sell the farms and personal property for the sum of $10,000, net to himself.

Later, about September 20,1920 the plaintiff and the Carrabassett Timberland Company were brought together and entered into an oral contract for the sale and purchase of the property at the price of $10,500. The plaintiff executed a deed and bill of sale, in accordance with the trade, which he left with the First National Bank of Farmington for delivery to his grantee upon payment of the purchase price. No other writings were made, the purchase money was not paid or tendered, and no title ever passed in pursuance of this agreement.

In the meantime and unknown to the plaintiff, the Timberland Company had entered into negotiations with the Carrabassett Hardwood Lumber Company, whereby the latter company agreed to purchase all the personal property, take a lease of the farm from the Timberland Company and execute certain stumpage permits.

The Hardwood Company failed to perform any of its agreements. Its agreement was oral, and not enforcible. The breach of agreement resulted in the neglect of the Timberland Company to take and pay for the farm and personal property as it, in the outset, had agreed to do, though not by an enforcible contract. Within a few days after the Timberland Company and the Hardwood Company had com[273]*273pleted their agreement of supposed sale and purchase, the president of the Hardwood Company entered into possession of the farm and took into his custody the various articles of personal property, and used, consumed, and disposed of them as the property of his company.

Several weeks after the original understanding between the plaintiff' and the Timberland Company, the president of the Hardwood Company made a check for S600, payable to the Timberland Company on account of the sale price of the personal property. This check was delivered to the attorney of the Timberland Company, but the plaintiff had nothing to do with it. Nothing further was ever done toward paying the plaintiff for his real and personal property.

Upon the farm when the defendant went into possession was live stock composed of team horses, cows, sheep, calves, pigs and hens.

All the personal property of the alleged conversion was attached on the plaintiff’s writ, except what had been destroyed or lost.

The plea was the general issue with a brief statement: First, that the defendant was a tenant, and that trespass not trover was the plaintiff’s form of remedy. Second, that the defendant while in the legal possession fed a large part of the hay to the stock of the plaintiff. Third, that the hay, grain and stock was delivered to the defendant by the plaintiff or with his consent, and that he is equitably estopped. Fourth, (consolidating^ several specifications), that the plaintiff had knowledge of the delivery of all of said personal property to it, by the Carrabassett Timberland Company, and made no objection to the defendant corporation receiving said property, using and improving it, or feeding the hay and grain to said stock, and that he has waived or is now equitably estopped from making any claim thereto.

The only specifications which it is necessary to consider in framing the issues involved are the general issue, which raises the questions of fact as to whether the plaintiff had notice of the taking, waived objection or was estopped.

The case comes up on report, thereby investing the court with jury powers in deciding all questions of fact.

It is conceded that no demand was made.

The case accordingly, is resolved into the following propositions: First, was the taking by the defendant tortious? Second, if not was it waived? Third, if not waived, was he estopped?

[274]*274At the outset it cannot fail of note that the evidence shows that the equites in the case predominate strongly in favor of the plaintiff. Both the Timberland Company and the defendant company trifled with his rights. The sale was a cash transaction and neither company had a right to take possession of and use his property, until one or the other had paid for it, or by such'possession and use, assumed a moral responsibility to pay for it, which the plaintiff had a right to respect and regard as a guarantee of payment. We are, therefore, of the opinion that the taking by the defendant was tortious, even if the plaintiff knew it, and knew the defendant’s use of it. He had a right to assume and expect, under the trade he had made and the deposit of his deeds, that the purchaser would shortly pay for the property, and was justified in regarding the Timberland Company in the meantime, as the owner of it, with a right to do what it pleased with respect to it. He had no occasion to think that the purchaser, without notifying him that it was not going to pay for the property as it had agreed to, would put his property into the possession of another corporation, without making any arrangement whereby he' was to be paid.

But it may be said the plaintiff was charged with knowledge that the Timberland Company was not legally bound to pay for the property. True, and the Timberland Company was equally charged and consequently had no legal right, under the guise of a contract which they did not intend to carry out, to give possession of his property to the defendant. ■ The plaintiff had no privity of contract, whatever with the defendant. He relied and had a right to rely upon the word and action of the Timberland Company. It would be a distortion of justice to permit these two corporations to thus allure the unsuspecting plaintiff into substantial loss and then drop him because they were not legally bound by the agreement by means of which they had led him into the trap, nor does the law permit it.

The contention of the plaintiff is confirmed by his positive testimony as well as the overwhelming probabilities of the transaction. On cross-examination he said:

Q. “During that time (at a former hearing) were you asked this question: 'Did you object to Mr. Beedy turning it over to New-comb?’ and did you answer: 'After they had taken some of the stuff Beedy spoke to me about it, and I told him it was all right because Newcomb had bought the stuff of the Carrabassett Lumber [275]*275Company, who had bought the property from him (me) and I expected to get my pay for it in a few days’.” He said he did.

This answer is made the backbone of the defense. It was, however, in exact harmony with what the plaintiff believed, and had a right to believe, was the fact in regard to his sale of and expected pay for his property. The plaintiff says that if he had received his check that is all there would have been to it. But he was looking all the time, and expecting the check from the Timberland Company. He says he never recognized the Hardwood Company in any way with respect to any responsibility upon it for payment for the property, nor is there any claim that he did. He regarded what was going on between the Timberland Company and the Hardwood Company as their affair and not his.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Dubie v. Branz
73 A.2d 217 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1950)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
121 Me. 271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wyman-v-carrabassett-hardwood-lumber-co-me-1922.