Riedinger v. Diamond Match Co.
Riedinger v. Diamond Match Co.
Opinion of the Court
This’ was an action, on an implied contract, to recover damages for the failure of the defendant below to run, sort, and deliver, with reasonable dispatch and care, certain logs driven by the plaintiff below down the Ontonagon river, in Michigan, whereby they became worm-eaten, sap-rotten, and discolored. The case is brought here to review the action of the trial judge directing the jury to return a verdict for thé defendant on the ground that the same damages claimed in this action were sought to be recovered in a former suit between the same parties, in which the ruling and judgment of the court were adverse to the claim now made.
In his declaration the plaintiff below (now plaintiff in error) alleged that the Ontonagon river is a public, navigable river, upon which the plaintiff, in common with other citizens, had and has the right of free and unrestricted navigation, including the right of floatage of logs thereon; that the defendant on January i, 1890, and for a period of eight years thereafter, “assumed control, management, and operation” of the river at a point about two miles above its mouth “for the purpose of booming all the logs placed in said river,” and assumed to manage the river at the point of booming, and for a space of ten miles above said point, “for the purpose of running, driving, sluicing, and sorting” all the logs driven down the river by the plaintiff and others; that the plaintiff on January 1, 1893, and for four years thereafter, was engaged in the business of cutting, banking, running, and driving logs on the Ontonagon river, and procuring the manufacture of the same into lumber, in the transaction of which business it was necessary that the logs be run and driven through the space in the river controlled and operated by the defendant, and delivered at a point below; that the plaintiff, from time to time, in the spring, summer, and fall of 1894, to and including the summer and fall of 1898, delivered to the defendant “large quantities of pine saw logs, to wit, three million feet,” within that portion of the stream controlled and operated by the defendant, “to be run, sorted, and delivered to the plaintiff by the said defendant with reasonable dispatch and care”; that the defendant received said logs, but did not run, sort, and deliver them with reasonable dispatch and care, but delayed the delivery to the plaintiff “into the booms as aforesaid” for an unreasonable space of time, by reason whereof damages resulted as follows :
“A large quantity of the logs of the said plaintiff, to wit, three million feet thereof, became sap-rotten, worm-eaten, discolored, and otherwise greatly injured and damaged, to wit, thirty-five per cent, in quantity, and twenty-five per cent, in value, became and were wholly lost to the said plaintiff, and a large quantity thereof, to wit, fifty per cent., became damaged and lessened in value, and the said logs, as a whole, were thereby greatly injured and*246 damaged by being and becoming worm-eaten, sap-rotten, and discolored by reason of tbe failure of tbe said defendant to deliver said logs -with reasonable dispatch and care into tbe boom as aforesaid; and said plaintiff was prevented from floating, rafting, and manufacturing said logs into lumber, and selling tbe same, within the time in which said plaintiff could and would have otherwise done, had said logs been delivered to said plaintiff by said defendant with reasonable dispatch, and was so hindered until the value of the timber intended and designed to be manufactured therefrom had fallen in value two dollars per thousand feet since the time and times when tbe plaintiff could and would have obtained said logs, and manufactured the same into lumber, had the same been delivered by the said defendant in the booms as aforesaid with all reasonable dispatch, and that by reason thereof the said plaintiff has been damaged to a large amount, to wit, thirty thousand dollars.”
It appears that, at the May term, 1898, of the court below, the plaintiff had sued the defendant in tort to recover damages alleged to have been sustained by reason of the unlawful obstruction of the Ontonagon river by the defendant, whereby the same 3,000,000 feet of logs were wrongfully held back in the river, and became worm-eaten, sap-rotten, and discolored. That case was decided by the court below in favor of the defendant, and this court on December 4, 1900 (105 Fed. 567, 44 C. C. A. 606), affirmed the judgment; holding that, under the circumstances of the case which are detailed in the opinion, an action in tort would not lie. Subsequently the present suit was brought to recover upon an implied promise to run, sort, and deliver the plaintiff’s logs with reasonable dispatch below the jam piers or booms maintained by the defendant. At the same time the plaintiff sued the defendant for unlawfully obstructing the Ontonagon river by maintaining jam piers or booms near the mouth thereof, he brought suit upon an alleged contract with the defendant to manufacture and saw the same 3,000,000 feet of logs, which he had cut during the years 1894 and 1895, and recovered judgment for $1,203.80, which was subsequently paid and discharged. It was this action the court below held operated as a bar to the maintenance of the present suit. It is therefore necessary to examine with some care what the plaintiff then claimed.
In the declaration in that action the plaintiff charged: That the defendant on July 10, 1895, at Ontonagon, Mich., entered into a contract with him to manufacture into lumber about 3,000,000 feet of pine saw logs, which he had cut upon lands near the Ontonagon river or its tributaries during the winter and spring of 1894 and 1895, and which had been banked for transportation by driving down these streams, to the mouth of the Ontonagon river, where the defendant had its sawmills located. That the defendant agreed it would manufacture the logs into lumber, and deliver them upon its docks ready for shipment, and would so manufacture them “as soon as they should come down the said streams upon the drives”; charging $3 a thousand feet, board measure, for lumber cut by circular saws, and $3.50 a thousand feet for lumber cut by band saws. That in accordance with this agreement, in July, 1896, or thereabouts, the defendant cut, manufactured into lumber, and delivered to the plaintiff, 900,000 feet of said logs, but subsequently neglected and refused to complete its contract and manufacture the balance of the logs into lumber at the stipulated price, but in June, 1897, demanded $5 a thousand feet for manufacturing the
It is to be observed that In each action the plaintiff sought to be made whole for the damage due to the worm-eaten, sap-rotten, and discolored condition of the logs when finally cut into lumber. Left too long in the water, their condition deteriorated, and as a result tht logs cut into less lumber, and into lumber of inferior quality and value. In the former action the damage was charged to the delay in sawing the logs; in the present, to the delay in running, sorting, and delivering them. In the former, the plaintiff relied upon the express sawing contract; in the present, • upon the implied booming contract. The trial judge held that, although the contracts relied on were different, the damage for which the plaintiff sought to be made whole was the same, and therefore the former action was a bar to the present suit. In determining whether he was correct, it is important to ascertain when the logs were delivered to the defendant under the sawing contract.
The declaration charged that the logs had been cut and banked for driving in the winter and spring of 1894 and 1895; that the sawing contract was made July 10, 1895, and under it the defendant agreed to saw the logs “as soon as they should come down the said streams
It was for the damages resulting from the failure to do this that he sued in the former action.
The present action is based upon the theory that the logs were not delivered under the sawing contract until they had been run through the jam piers and placed in the storage booms below, and that the delay which damaged the logs was occasioned by the failure of the defendant, with reasonable dispatch, to run, sort, and deliver the logs below the jam piers, under the implied booming contract. But if, from the fact that the defendant operated the boom, there was an implied contract to sort and deliver with reasonable dispatch the logs which came down the river on the drives, it was superseded by the subsequent, express contract to sort and saw, with reasonable dispatch, the logs of the plaintiff delivered in the jam above the boom. It is to be noted,, moreover, that, irrespective of the contract upon which the plaintiff relies, the approximate cause of damage in each case is the delay in manufacturing the logs. Delay in delivering the logs below the jam piers under the implied contract could not injure the plaintiff unless it prevented or postponed the manufacture of the logs. It could, make no difference to the plaintiff whether his logs were above or below the jam piers, if at the time there was no mill accessible to cut them into-lumber. In this connection, it is to be noted that after the defendant refused to saw the logs, except at an advance price (due to the fact that its mills burned down in August, 1896, and thereafter it was compelled to ship the logs by rail to its mills at Green Bay), the plaintiff
While it is true that, upon the trial of the former action, the jury was instructed there was no evidence of any damage suffered by the plaintiff on account of the breach of the alleged sawing contract, other than the additional price of $1 per thousand feet paid for transporting the logs to the Nester Mill, and sawing them into lumber there, the-question for us to determine, in reviewing the action of the court below, is not what was proved, but what might have been proved under the declaration in the former case. It is not what the plaintiff got,, but what he sought to get, that we must consider. Having sued the defendant for damages because of the worm-eaten, sap-rotten, and discolored condition of his logs when sawed, alleging it was due to delay in sawing them, and having recovered a judgment in that suit, which has been paid, the plaintiff could not maintain another action for the same thing by shifting his position, and averring the condition of the-logs was due to the delay in delivering them, especially in view of the fact that in the former suit he claimed the logs were delivered to the-defendant under the sawing contract at the very time he now claims they were delivered under the booming contract, namely, when they reached the jam upon the drive. A mistake in launching litigation,, or a failure of proof upon trial, cannot be corrected in the manner at1 tempted in this suit.
In our opinion, the trial judge was justified in directing a verdict for the defendant, and the judgment of the court below is consequently affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- RIEDINGER v. DIAMOND MATCH CO.
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Logs and Logging—Implied Contract—Merger in Subsequent Express Contract. Where defendant, operating a boom in a river, into which logs of various owners were driven, made an express contract with plaintiff to sort and saw his .logs delivered in the jam above the boom with reasonable dispatch, a previous implied contract to sort and deliver such logs with reasonable dispatch as they came down the river, by reason of defendant’s operation of the boom, was merged in the express contract. 2. Same—Judgments—Res Judicata. Where the entire loss to plaintiff from the depreciation in value of certain logs resulted from a postponement of manufacture of the logs in consequence of defendant’s breach of contract, and in a former action, in which plaintiff recovered judgment, the damages were charged to the delay in sawing the logs, such judgment was a bar to a subsequent action based on the theory of a breach of an implied contract by defendant, as the owner of a boom, to sort and deliver the logs below the boom with reasonable dispatch; such delay being included in the postponed manufacture of logs.