Langdale v. Griffin
Langdale v. Griffin
Opinion of the Court
F. M. Griffin and S. H. Brady brought suit .against <T. D. Langdale and J. W. Langdale for damages from the breach of an oral contract. It was alleged that the defendants entered into a contract with the plaintiffs, whereby the plaintiffs were 'to remove their sawmill from another county, erect it upon the land of J. W. Langdale, and saw a certain quantity of timber, the logs to be cut and furnished at the mill by the defendants and to be sawn by the plaintiffs into lumber, for which services the plaintiffs were to receive $4 per thousand feet. The breach of the contract alleged was that the defendants refused to furnish .the logs to the mill, to the damage of the plaintiffs. The defendants denied "the contract as alleged in the plaintiffs’ petition. The trial resulted in a verdict for-the plaintiffs in the sum of $2,500, and the court refused to set the verdict aside on motion of the defendants.
It appeared from their own testimony that the plaintiffs had information that the Langdales owned a certain body of timber known as “Florida fractions,” and they made a trip to the home •offthe defendants with a view to securing a contract to saw this timber .into lumber. They met d. D. Langdale, who informed them that his brother, J. W. Langdale, owned a certain body of timber, and had contracted with him to manufacture the same into lumber at five dollars per thousand feet. Negotiations were immediately entered into between J. D. Langdale and the plaintiffs, resulting -in an agreement whereby J. D. Langdale was to allow the plaintiffs to take his contract and cut the lumber at four dollars, per thousand, and J. D. Langdale was to receive the difference between the amount his brother had contracted to pay him and the amount for which the plaintiffs engaged to do the work, to wit, ■one dollar per thousand. J. D. Langdale explained to the plaintiffs that his brother’s lease upon the timber would expire in 13 or 14 months, and that it must be cut within that time, and impressed upon them the importance of moving the mill to the location as quickly as' possible. The plaintiffs returned home, dismantled their mill, loaded it on the cars, and had it shipped to the railroad station near the proposed location. After the machinery had reached its destination, the plaintiffs' for the first time saw J. W. Langdale, who was informed that they had as
The contract was verbal, and the parties differed as to its terms. All agreed that J. W. Langdale was the owner of the timber, who had contracted with J. D. Langdale to manufacture it into lumber, and that the plaintiffs assumed J. D. Langdale’s' contract with, his brother, and that J. D. Langdale was to receive one dollar per thousand feet upon the plaintiffs’ performing the contract. There is not a syllable of testimony indicating that J. D. Lang-dale obligated himself to furnish the timber to the mill of the plaintiffs; and if the jury should find the contract as claimed by the plaintiffs in their testimony, the obligation to furnish the timber to the mill was not upon J. D. Langdale, and therefore J. D. Langdale would not be liable for any breach of his brother’s obligation to him growing out of a contract which he had transferred, with his brother’s consent, to the plaintiffs. Therefore
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.