Gasper v. Heimbach
Gasper v. Heimbach
Opinion of the Court
This case was before this court on a former appeal. See 53 Minn. 414, (55 N. W. 559.) Plaintiffs and defendant, on February 18, 1892, entered into an agreement whereby plaintiffs agreed to sell and deliver to defendant 1,800 logs “boomed and delivered to tug,” at an agreed price and according to the surveyor general’s scale, defendant to furnish the chains necessary to boom the logs.
The complaint alleges that, after making this agreement, the parties modified it by agreeing that the logs “should be delivered to
The answer admits the making of the original agreement; but denies that it was ever changed or modified, and alleges ,that, in attempting to boom the logs, plaintiffs were so careless and negligent that the boom broke, and the logs ran down the river, and scattered, and a large part of them never have been found; that defendant, at great expense, picked up and secured 1,056 pieces of said logs, and no more; and that the rest have never been delivered to him. It is admitted by the complaint that defendant paid more than the sum that would be due for these 1,056 logs, admitted by defendant to have been delivered to him.
On the trial the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiffs, and from an order denying his motion for a new trial defendant appeals.
On the trial it was proved by uncontradicted expert testimony that in the logging busiess the word “boom,” in the term “boom and deliver” to tug or to men, means to completely inclose logs afloat in a boom, chained and fastened together at the ends; and, as said in the former opinion, “even without such evidence, this would seem to be the meaning of that language of the contract.” This is not disputed by plaintiffs, though they do not attempt to prove that the logs were thus boomed when .they claim they were delivered by them to defendant. They claim that defendant waived this provision of the contract, and that the logs were delivered to him, and he received and accepted them without their being thus completely inclosed and secured afloat in a boom. We cannot agree with plaintiffs’ counsel on this point, and are of the opinion that the evidence does not prove that said 705 logs were ever delivered to defendant, or received or accepted by him, and that, consequently, the evidence does not sustain the verdict.
Neither does it appear that this servant Joe had any authority to waive this provision in the agreement. He was not in defendant’s service prior to this. Defendant testifies: “I told him, when they got the raft ready, to bring them down;” “when the raft was ready, to order what he wanted from me, and I would send it to him at Fond du Lac, to send the raft down the river.” Joe himself testifies: “He [defendant] told me, 'After the raft is ready, closed, and delivered to you, try and get it down.’ ” This is all the evidence of the servant’s authority. One of the plaintiffs testified on their behalf that Joe came to him, and stated that he had a job from defendant “to take down those logs,” and wanted from plaintiffs the job of rolling into the river the logs that were aground; that witness employed him for this purpose, and he rolled the logs into the river. It is the undisputed evidence of both these witnesses that the plaintiff then borrowed from one of his neighbors a rope, and assisted Joe in slacking the boom down the river, and opening it, to let in said
Said plaintiff further testified that he met defendant a day or two after the logs escaped, and told him he should have sent a man there. He answered that “he thought the man was capable to take down a raft of logs,” and “said he was going to take a tug, and pick them up.” “I said I had nothing to do with it.” We cannot see that this would make defendant liable for any more logs than he has received. It did not amount to an agreement that he would recover all the logs, or that he would pay for all of them, whether he received them or not.
The complaint alleges that, by the original agreement, defendant agreed to pay $800 on February 22, 1892, and give his note for $á00, due in three months, which he did, and has paid both of said sums. The answer admits that this note was paid at maturity. There is evidence to prove that the logs escaped the last of April, while this note was not due until the 22d of May, thereafter. It is urged by plaintiffs’ counsel that this admission that defendant paid his note after the logs escaped is sufficient to show a waiver of the agreement to boom the logs ready for tug or men to take them down the river, and an acceptance of all the logs. The complaint alleges no waiver of the agreement to boom, but a full performance of that part of the contract. Neither do we find anything in the proceedings during the trial until after the testimony was closed which can be said to fairly apprise the defendant that a claim of waiver would be made by plaintiffs. The evidence introduced tended as much to prove performance as waiver, or more, but did not prove either as to the 705 logs.
It is not necessary here to decide whether or not proof of such a waiver of full performance, and acceptance of part performance under an allegation of full performance, is a material variance from the cause of action alleged in the complaint. »
It does not appear to whom defendant paid this note, or under what circumstances he paid it. For all that appears, he may, as
This disposes of the case, and the order appealed from must be reversed. So ordered.
{Opinion published. 60 N. W. 1080.)
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Charles Gasper v. William P. Heimbach
- Status
- Published