Cain v. Weston
Cain v. Weston
Opinion of the Court
The defendant made a contract with the plaintiff, by which he agreed to sell to the plaintiff all the lumber he should manufacture, or have manufactured for him, at White Lake, in Michigan, during the
The defendant’s counsel claims exemption from liability only upon one ground; and that is, that the particular lumber to which the plaintiff’s claim and proof referred, was not “manufactured for him,” within the terms of the contract, but was bought by him at White Lake, and therefore he was not bound to deliver it.
Upon this question we agree with the plaintiff. The lumber was manufactured out of logs owned by the defendant, and for the sawing of which, at certain rates, he had a contract from the parties who actually sawed them, whose mill was at White Lake. The proof offered by the plaintiff shows very satisfactorily that the defendant, for the mere purpose of avoiding his obligation to deliver the lumber to the plaintiff, went to the parties with whom he had this contract for sawing, and nominally sold them the logs, upon an agreement that they were to saw them, and he was to take his pay in the lumber at a specified price per thousand feet. The parties sawing could make a little more under this arrangement than they were making under the old, and therefore assented to it. But the price at which the defendant took the lumber in pay for the logs, was several dollars less per thousand than the the same kind of lumber was selling for at the same place. This shows clearly enough that it was a mere shift or device to avoid the obligation of his contract with the plaintiff, by giving a new name to the manufacture of lumber for him.
But the court below went still further, and decided that even upon the new contract, as made by the
That new contract was in writing.
This position was very ably and exhaustively illustrated by the argument of the respondent’s counsel, though he cited no cases in support of it. Still, it is not without authority. A similar question has frequently arisen under that provision of the statute of frauds which requires a contract for a sale of goods, of more than a specified value, to be in writing. And the fair result of the cases is, that such a contract as that now under consideration was not a sale within the statute, but was a contract for the manufacture. It is
All the various particulars distinguishing a contract of manufacture from one of sale concurred in this contract. The contract provided that the lumber was to be manufactured. It was to be done by particular parties, from certain specified materials then on hand, and, what is specially important, according to the order and direction of the other contracting party. Within all the cases, it was a contract for the manufacture of the lumber; and so the defendant was bound to deliver the lumber to the plaintiff. It was conceded by his counsel that this view of the effect of that contract necessarily disposed of the case against him, without reference to any other questions.
By the Court. — The judgment is affirmed.
A motion for a rehearing was denied.
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