Helm v. Bryant
Helm v. Bryant
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action of assumpsit was brought to settle a dispute between a vendor and vendee of hemp, upon the question how the quality and price were to be estimated under a verbal sale of “ a lot of hemp estimated at five tons, at $4 62|- per cwt., or per hundred weight, nothing having been said as to the number of pounds which should constitute the cwt., or hundred weight.” The case upon the law and facts having been submitted to the Judge without a jury, he decided that the cwt. or hundred weight, was to be estimated as containing one hundred and twelve pounds, and gave judgment for the defendants. The plaintiff’s motion for a new trial was overruled, and he brings the case to this Court for revision.
The evidence authorized the judgment unless the question involved is decided by the act of 1837, (3 Stat. Law, 267.) That act declares that “ in the construction of contracts made after the first day of March 1837, for the sale or purchase of hemp, the quantity shall be ascertained by estimating a ton gross as containing two thousand pounds, avoirdupois weight, and after that, rate, unless otherwise expressly provided in the contract: Provided however, that nothing herein contained shall be construed to affect the standard of the pound weight.” This statute fixes in the contracts referred to, the number of pounds in a ton, and if this sale had been at so much per ton, as the ton must have been measured as directed by the statute, the price of any number of tons and of the fractional part of a ton must have been ascertained by the same rule. But this
In Tomlin’s law dictionary title weight, in speaking of avoirdupois weight it is said “in this weight twelve pounds over are allowed to every hundred, so as one hundred and twelve pounds make the hundredweight,” for which is cited Dalt. 248. And in commerce the word ton or tun is understood to mean twenty hundred gross or twenty hundred weight, each hundred consisting of 112 lbs. The Statute doubtless has reference to this meaning of the word ton, and intends to give it a-different meaning in contracts for the sale of hemp, where the parties do not define it. The effect of the Statute where it applies, is to reduce the ton from twenty hundred weight of 112 lbs. each, to twenty hundred pounds. If the term cwt. had no other use or application but as designating the twentieth part of a ton, then the Statute, by fixing the quantity of a ton and its parts, would fix the meaning of this term. But .the term has an independent and indeed a common meaning, as designating not the twentieth part of a ton, but one hundred and twelve pounds; and we cannot perceive that the Statute altered this meaning, or attempted to fix the number of pounds which shall be understood to be designated by the term cwt., or hundred weight. It would have been so easy to say, “the quantity shall be ascertained by estimating the ton, as containing 2000 lbs., and the hundred weight, or cwt., as containing 100 lbs., and after that rate,” that the omission to include the latter term, would almost seem to have been intentional. At any rate, the omission tends to show that it was not present to the minds of the Legislature. And we cannot say that because they have deemed it expedient to change or to fix the measure or mode of estimating a ton, they must be supposed to have intended thereby to change or fix the estimate of a cwt. or hundred weight. ' If they had fixed the
What may have been the intention of the Legislature except as it is evinced by the Statute itself, we have no means of ascertaining. There is in our opinion nothing in the Statute to show that the Legislature intended to change the meaning of the term cwt. or hundred weight as fixed by custom, or that that meaning except so far as it entered into the import of the word ton, was considered to be of evil consequence. It would be but conjecture to say that this was deemed an evil, and was intended to be remedied by the Statute, when all reference to it is omitted.
Wherefore the judgment is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.