Liebke v. Methudy
Liebke v. Methudy
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action is brought to recover damages for a breach of warranty in the sale of logs. The plaintiffs’ petition states that, at the time of the purchase and for
The petition then avers that plaintiffs paid the consideration of the sale, but that the logs purchased of defendants in Reelfoot creek and its tributaries did not produce an average of 382 feet of sound lumber to the log, but, on the contrary, they produced on an average only 222 feet of lumber per log, and the lumber so produced was not sound, but was worm-eaten, decayed, and. otherwise defective, and of an inferior quality, in consequence whereof plaintiffs say they were damaged in the sum of fourteen hundred dollars. The petition contained a further allegation as to the breach'of warranty of plaintiffs’ title, in regard to the logs in Paw Paw creek, which it is unnecessary to consider, as the court upon defendants’ request took that branch of the case from the jury, there being no evidence to support it.
Defendants’ answer was a general denial. The cause was tried by a jury, who, under the instructions of the court, found for plaintiffs, and assessed their damages at $291.65.
Upon a former trial of the cause the trial court non-suited the plaintiffs, but its action in so doing was reversed by this court. 14 Mo. App. 65.
The writtten contract between the parties, which was before the court then, and is before the court now, is as follows:
St. Louis, October 15, 1878.
Messrs. Liebke & Schrage,
Bought of Methudy & Meyer, Lumber and Commission Merchants, No. 202 South Fourth St., — ■
520 walnut logs.......................$2750.00
50 poplar logs........................ 0000.00
Received notes sixty and ninety days, and four months from date, in payment of above.
Methudy & Meyer.
Methtjdy & Meyeb.
Five hundred and twenty log's being guaranteed in creeks, if more are there, this is to transfer our title to them also. ' Methtjdy & Meyeb.
The main contention at the former trial was whether the plaintiffs should be permitted to give oral testimony of representations which they claimed were made to them in regard to the size and quality of the logs, antecedent and cotemporaneously with the date of the sale .and the execution of the above memoranda.
This guaranty plaintiffs claimed by virtue of the exhibition to them by one of defendants, of a certain scale bill, purporting to give the measurement of the logs, and the representations of one of defendants, made to them that the logs would hold out according to the measurement of the scale bill.
When the case was here before, this court said: “ The testimony tended to show that Meyer, a member of the defendant firm, proposed to Liebke, one of the plaintiff partners in the city of St. Louis, to sell to the plaintiffs, a lot of 520 walnut logs, then lying in Eeelfoot creek and its tributaries, and at the same time handed to Liebke a scale bill showing separately the length and diameter in feet and inches of every log. Liebke and Meyer went over the list together, and calculated by rules familiar to lumber dealers, the quantity of lumber that could be sawed out from each log, and the average number of feet per log that the whole lot of 520 would yield. This average was 382 feet.”
The petition stated that the logs fell far short of the dimensions guaranteed, that the average was only 222 feet, instead of 382 per log. The trial court at the former hearing did not permit plaintiffs to prove this deficiency, holding that no guaranty could be considered which was
We have quoted thus fully from the former opinion of the court, because we are now requested by appellants to re-examine the law, as then decided, upon the facts stated therein. We have done so .and have reached the same conclusion. The general rule undoubtedly is, that when parties reduce their ageeement to writing the presumption arises that the writing contains the whole contract. This rule, however, is subject to so numerous exceptions, that it has long ceased to bé a rule of universal' application. The difficulty in most cases has been to determine whether the cause before the court did or did not fall within' the exceptions thus engrafted upon the rule. What would seem to be a contradiction between the cases arises not so much from a determination as to the nature of the exceptions, as from the difficulty of .deciding whether any given case falls properly within the exceptions thus determined.
We must hold that upon the facts stated in its former opinion, the conclusion reached by the court was correct. Plaintiffs had seen the logs, defendants had not. The scaling was done by defendants’ agents, and represented by defendants to plaintiffs as reliable. Tl(.e very basis of
There is, however, a difficulty in the case of a more serious character, and that is that the opinion of the court is based upon a state of facts which was probably shown by the record then before it, but which is not shown by the record now before us. The scale bill which formed the basis of the contract, is not a scale bill of 520, but 583 logs in Heelfoot creek. It is conceded on all hands that plaintiffs guaranteed only 520 logs. Assuming, therefore, that the scale bill was a guarantee, that the logs would «orne up substantially to the measurement therein given, it could be held to be a guarantee only that there were in Heelfoot creek 520 logs, the subject of the sale, and that the measurement of said 520 logs was given among the measurement of the 583 contained in the scale bill. Plaintiffs’ guarantee in the absence of fraud would have been complied with by a delivery of any 520 logs, forming part of the 583 described in the scale Lill,_ even though the logs thus delivered were the smallest of the number. Of fraud there is not a tittle of evidence in the case.
The trial court in its instructions to the jury held that the scale bill was in the nature of a guarantee of logs of a certain quality, averaging a certain number of feet per log. This instruction may have been justified by the language of the former opinion of this court, and by the facts therein stated, but is certainly erroneous as applied to the state of facts disclosed by the record before us and above stated. Holding that this instruction of the trial court was erroneous, we have carefully examined the testimony for the purpose of determining
The uncontradicted testimony in the case shows that the logs delivered to defendants were handled by them to the best advantage, and sawed into inch lumber, yielding an aggregate not exceeding 123,000 feet, board measure, and that the contract between the parties, was based upon an estimate of $13.00 per thousand feet,, board measure, in the log.
The original scale bill now produced before us on which the board measure of each log as scaled is carried out by plaintiff according to rules and in a manner the accuracy of which is not impeached, shows the following figures :
Logs containing between 100 and 200 feet b.m. 63
200 and 300 C C cc cc CC cc 143
300 and 400 cc cc cc cc cc 160
400 and 500 cc .c cc cc cc 91
cc cc cc 500 and 600 cc cc 65
cc cc cc 600 and 700 cc cc 26
cc cc cc 700 and 800 cc cc 19
cc cc cc 800 and 900 cc cc 12
cc cc cc 900 and 1000 cc cc 2
cc cc cc 1000 and 1100 cc cc 2
Making an aggregate of.................. 583
Taking 520 of the logs, smallest in dimensions as given on the scale biU, and their contents in board measure, according to scale bill, would still be over 217,000 feet, showing a difference between their contents, as per scale bill, and their contents, as per actual yield, of 94,000 feet, or an actual loss to plaintiffs, at the rate of $13 per thousand, regardless of quality, of $1222.00.
As there was evidence before the jury tending to show that the logs did not hold out according to scale bill; as concerning the substantial facts of the guarantee there is no controversy; as a verdict for plaintiffs, even under absolutely correct declarations of law, would have
it is so ordered.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.