Taylor v. Pierce
Taylor v. Pierce
Opinion of the Court
This case comes before us on a motion to set aside the verdict, which was for the plaintiffs; and also on exceptions. We have no full report of the evidence, and therefore cannot consider and act upon the merits of the motion.
The first exception is, that the presiding justice did not order a nonsuit, upon the plaintiff's own testimony, upon the ground that if the defendants were liable at all to the plaintiffs, they were liable severally for the damages claimed in this action, and not liable jointly.
It appears from the report of the evidence, so far as it goes, that on the tenth of December, 1853, the defendants, Waldo T. & H. Pierce, Henry E. Prentiss and Horace Jen
There was evidence by plaintiffs tending to show that
We are not prepared to say that if the defendants had, in any way, by selling the land or otherwise, prevented the plaintiffs from entering upon the premises to which the permit related, and cutting according to ’ the terms of the permit, that an action could not have been maintained by the plaintiffs against them jointly, to recover such damages as the plaintiffs might thereby have sustained. The defendants were under no obligation to extend the permit. They were at liberty to exact new terms and conditions upon granting such extension. Prom reading the original contract, we are led to the conclusion that the defendants were desirous not only to contract, but to be certain that the contract should be fully performed by the defendants. To make certain the sale of stumpage to the amount contracted for, and within the time specified. The timber was exposed to fires and trespassers, and they no doubt wished to convert it into money or other property less exposed to deterioration or loss. Hence they had a stipulation for a forfeiture on the
This action is founded upon a partial failure of the consideration of each of those notes. To whom have the plaintiffs made these payments, if they have made them at all, or had made them before this suit was commenced? Not to the defendants jointly, but to each one severally. If any action can be maintained for a partial failure of consideration, it should be an action against each one to recover money which he has received, more than he is justly and equitably entitled to hold.
We are of opinion that if the presiding justice should not have ordered a nonsuit upon this point, and we do not decide that ho was bound to do so, he should have instructed the jury that, from the whole evidence, the plaintiffs had failed to prove a joint promise on the part of the defendants. For this cause we think the exceptions should be sustained,
The defendants contended, that if there was timber enough on the premises of the quality named in the permit, to pay the notes, at the rates of stumpage agreed on, and that the plaintiffs, by putting on and keeping on teams, and using the diligence required by the permit, might have hauled; that the notes must be paid, and that the plaintiffs could set up no defence, unless they had done all the contract required, to haul the timber to pay the notes; but the court overruled the position, and instructed the jury that “ if there was timber left on the premises, which the permit required to be hauled, and which the plaintiffs, by putting and keeping on the teams and using the diligence required by the permit, might have hauled, that was only a matter of damages to be allowed the defendants, in offset to the plaintiffs’ claim, and that the rule of damages was the difference between the contract price of the timber so left and the present value of it; and that if the timber so left was worth as much now as the contract price, there would be no damages but interest on the same; or if there was no timber left, there would be no damages.”
We are of opinion that this was erroneous. If the plaintiffs failed, by their own fault or neglect, to obtain timber enough to pay the $4000, they cannot set it up as a defence to the notes, or either of them, or make it the foundation of a suit for money had and received against the defendants, either jointly or severally.
The judge was requested to instruct the jury that the suit could not be maintained, because, at the date of the writ, the plaintiffs had paid nothing on the notes, but the amount of stumpage on the timber cut, and which they had credited in their account annexed. He declined to do so.
In this case we do not regard the notes, per se, as money in the hands of the defendants. They were not taken as cash. A lien was stipulated for, on all the timber cut, to
For these reasons the exceptions must he sustained.
Verdict set aside, and new trial granted.
Rice, J. The action was prematurely brought, and for that reason there must be a new trial. A nonsuit could not have been ordered by the presiding judge, in view, of the lohole evidence, it being offered on both sides. 32 Maine R., 576. The action is properly joint. The permit, is joint, and the receipt of the notes is joint. The recital of the distribution of the notes by the defendants inter se se. is wholly immaterial, and cannot affect the plaintiffs.
The measure of damages as agreed in the permit is “ the full and liquidated sum of four hundred dollars * * over and above the actual damage which the grantors may sustain.” The actual damages were such only as “ were the immediate and necessary result of the breach of the contract by the plaintiffs.” Bridges v. Stickney, 32 Maine R., 361.
I concur in .the result.
Appleton, J. According to the terms of the receipt given by the defendants, “ the notes when paid are to be in payment of four thousand dollars of the above stumpage,” and
The exceptions therefore must, for this reason, be sustained.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Wm. H. Taylor and als. versus Waldo T. Pierce and als.
- Status
- Published