Horton v. Harbridge
Horton v. Harbridge
Opinion of the Court
The only assignment of error pressed upon the argument at bar, was the third. It alleges that the learned judge below erred in saying to the jury that “ If you come to the conclusion, under the evidence, that there was a clear mistake made in the measurement of the logs, then you determine that from the amount that was sawed upon the mill, both in 1886 and 1887.”
The plaintiff below had contracted with the defendants to cut into saw logs and skid on- skidways, a certain amount of timber; the said logs to be scaled by Scribner’s Rule. After the work was all done and paid for, the plaintiff alleged that a mistake had been made in scaling the logs; that they amounted to much more in quantity than had been returned. This suit was brought to recover the difference, and the point to which the above language of the court referred, was the mode of as
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- G. & I. HORTON v. W. M. HARBRIDGE
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- («) Plaintiff made a contract with defendants to cut and skid timber at a certain price per thousand feet, the logs to be measured by Scribner’s Rule. When the logs were cut aud skidded, they were measured by the parties, the contract price paid and a receipt in full given. After some of the logs had been sawed, plaintiff, alleging a mistake against him in tire measurement upon which he had settled, remeasured the unsawed logs and brought suit for the difference in the whole. 1. In such case, the mistake in the first measurement being shown, that measurement and the settlement thereon would not bar recovery in this action, and if was not error to charge the jury that if the plaintiff was to have the benefit of the mill measurement of the logs that had been sawed, he should be bound by that measurement of the logs unsawed and remeasured by him.