Puffer Manufacturing Co. v. Alabama Marble Quarries
Puffer Manufacturing Co. v. Alabama Marble Quarries
Opinion of the Court
(1, 2) By its demurrer to the fourth count of the complaint defendant (appellant) endeavored to drive plaintiff (appellee) to a further description of the marble for the price of which plaintiff had declared in that count. There was no error in overruling the demurrer. The postulate of the demurrer was and is that a contract for the sale and delivery of a definite quantity of marble at an agreed price per cubic foot may not be enforced unless it also stipulates the exact quality of the marble. It will be presumed, nothing appearing otherwise, that the parties contracted with reference to merchantable marble, or even marble of a quality suitable for use in the business in which the defendant purchaser was engaged. But that is a term imported by law into the complaint and the contract alike. The count undertakes to state the contract in question according to its legal effect. Passing upon the pleading, the court could not know that the parties had contracted with reference to “No. 1 best quality cream A white” marble, and hence it could not sustain a demurrer to the count on the ground that it failed to set out the contract according to its legal effect.
(3, 4) Count 4 declared upon an express contract according to its legal effect, as we have already indicated. By its special pleas defendant brought another term into the contract, viz. that the sale set forth in the count was a sale by sample, and alleged that the marble delivered was not equal to the sample by which it had been sold. When it 'came to the proof, the parties were agreed that the sale was by sample, but they and their witnesses were far from agreement as to what the sample was, plaintiff contending that the marble delivered was the fair equivalent of the sample. This, we think, made the question of plaintiff’s recovery on the fourth count one for the jury. There was hence no error in refusing the general charge as to that count requested by the defendant. Not only so, but the verdict returned by the jury showed with reasonable certainty that it was not based
(5-7) Appellant further contends that the amount of the damages assessed failed to meet the evidence or the views of either party, that plaintiff should have recovered much more or nothing at all, and hence that the verdict should have been set aside on its motion. Defendant, appellant, used the marble delivered to it. This rendered defendant liable to plaintiff for the reasonable value of the marble, even though it did not correspond with the sample with reference to which the parties had contracted for the particular shipment in dispute, and evidently it was upon this theory of the case that the jury proceeded to a verdict for plaintiff. The quantum of damages in this posture of the case, the reasonable value of the marble such as it was, or its ordinary price, was a question of fact for the jury. Appellant insists that there was no evidence to support the verdict, that the jury assumed, in disregard of the law and the evidence, to arbitrate the difference between the parties, and hence that the verdict should have been set aside on motion as being an expression of the mere whim of the jury. But we think the written contract between the parties — we mean, not the order for the shipment in dispute, but the general contract by which appellant bound itself to buy all marble supplied to it at stipulated prices for designated grades — furnished evidence of the value pf the marble in question. It stipulated that “cream B” marble was to be paid for at the rate the jury seem to have adopted, viz., $1.50 per cubic foot, and our judgment is that from the conflicting opinions of the witnesses in this case the jury may well have found that the shipment in dispute was of “cream B” marble. Hence our conclusion not to affirm error of the trial court’s action in overruling the motion for a new trial.
Affirmed.
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