Fransen v. Eller
Fransen v. Eller
Opinion of the Court
The defendant in error recovered a verdict and judgment in the court below for the the sum of $67.50 for hauling lumber for the plaintiff in error from Ferris’s mill, in Sheridan county, to the Pine Ridge Agency. The only error assigned in the brief of counsel is that the verdict is not sustained by the evidence.
Plaintiff in error, in 1887, contracted with the government to furnish and deliver at the Pine Ridge Agency 400.000 feet of lumber. He also entered into an agreement with one Oliver Ferris, who owned a saw-mill in Sheridan county, to deliver at the agency on the contract. 100.000 feet. It is uncontradicted that Eller hauled from Ferris’s mill to the agency nearly 16,000 feet, which was applied on Fransen’s contract, and that the customary and reasonable price for hauling at that time was $4 per thousand feet. The contention of the plaintiff in error is that he never contracted with Eller to haul any lumber for him, but that the hauling was done on Ferris’s contract and for Ferris.
There is no merit in the proposition that the suit was prematurely brought. The money was due on demand as soon as the labor was performed. It is immaterial that Fransen has not yet been paid by the government. We fail to find any testimony that defendant in. error agreed to wait for his pay for hauling the lumber until Mr. Fransen received his money from the United States. It is inconsistent to claim such was the agreement, and at the same time insist that there was no contract between plaintiff and defendant for hauling lumber. Judgment
Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Peter Fransen v. W. M. Eller
- Status
- Published