Lutz v. Currence
Lutz v. Currence
Opinion of the Court
In this suit to recover damages for breach of an execu-tory contract by which certain timber was to be cut and manufactured into lumber, the court upon the trial of the case directed a verdict in favor of the defendant, and rendered the judgment of nil capiat thereon complained of upon this writ of error.
The defendants Rena U. Currence and Henry Currence, being the owners of a tract of 153 acres of land, upon which there was some merchantable timber, on the 9th of April, 1920, entered into a contract in writing with the plaintiff D. E. Lutz, by the terms of which they sold to the said D. E. Lutz all of the merchantable timber upon said 153 acres of land, and agreed to cut the same into logs, in accordance with the instructions of the said Lutz, or his manager, for all of which they were to receive the sum of $6.25 per thousand feet board measure. The contract further provided for the erection of a mill or mill camps upon the land, and gave the right to haul the logs thereover. There was paid to the defendants at the time the contract was entered into the sum of $200.00 in cash, which it was provided was to be refunded by deducting from the $6.25 per thousand feet which the defendants were to receive un
The defendants contend that the plaintiff is not entitled to recover any damages in this ease, for the reason that there was no breach of the contract upon their part, they being under no obligation to cut the logs unless William Wade was to do the sawing and scaling; and further, that even though they were guilty of a violation of their contract by refusing to cut the logs and get them in shape so that the plaintiff could saw them into lumber, still the evidence offered by the plaintiff did not show that he was entitled to any recovery for the reason that the contract was a sale of real estate, and that the measure of damages would be only the purchase money actually paid, in the absence of a showing of fraud, which was, according to their contention, only the sum of $150.00 after deducting the fifty dollars which they claimed as a forfeiture, and which sum of $150.00 was tendered to the plaintiff and paid into court; and further, that even though this contract be treated as a contract for the sale of personality, the plaintiff did not prove any proper measure of damages; that the measure of his damages in such case would be the difference between the market value of the logs after they were cut in the woods and the price which the plaintiff was to pay them therefor, and that even if this should not be the correct measure of dam
Is there merit in the defendant’s contention that they are excused from the performance of the contract because the plaintiff was unable to get William Wade to do the sawing and scaling? If there is, then the judgment of the court complained of is clearly right. The plaintiff contends, however, that this provision in the contract is a subordinate and insubstantial one, the failure to perform which would not justify the defendants in refusing performance of the contract upon their part, while the defendants contend that this was one of the material and substantial considerations for the contract at the time it was entered into. It does not occur to us that this provision of the contract forms any substantial or material part of it. It is evidently only a provision by which the parties agreed upon a man who they thought was competent to saw and measure the lumber for them. It really meant no more when properly interpreted than that the lumber should be sawed and scaled by a competent man. The failure upon, the part of one party to an executory contract to perform an independent or immaterial condition or covenant thereof will not excuse performance upon the part of the other party, and particularly is this true where the failure to perform is not the result of any bad faith. In 3 Elliott on Contracts, at § 2046, p. 230, it is said: “And where the stipulation does not go to the root of the contract so that a failure to perform it would render the performance of the rest of the contract a thing different in substance from what was contracted for, there is ordinarily not such a breach as will authorize an abandonment of the contract by the other party.” And Professor Williston in his work on Contracts, vol. 2, § 841, at p. 1610, says that, “A breach of a separate collateral promise of minor importance will not justify refusal by the other party to perform.” See also Kauffman v. Raeder, 108 Fed. 171,
Nor is there any more merit in the contention of the defendants that this contract constituted a sale of the stand ing timber, and that the measure of damages applicable thereto for a failure upon their part to perform is that applicable to sales of real estate, to-wit, the return of the purchase price with interest, in the absence of any showing of fraud upon the part of the party failing to perform. This contract did not provide for the sale of real estate. It contemplated the cutting of this timber into manufactured lumber. It is one entire contract. There were certain things to be performed by the plaintiff, and certain other covenants to be kept and performed by the defendants. The defendants were to furnish the timber and cut the same into logs, as directed by the plaintiff, but before anything was to bt paid therefor these logs had to be sawed into manufactured lumber and the same measured, and for each 1000 feet, board measure, the plaintiff agreed to pay the defendants the sum of $6.25 per thousand feet. But even if this contract could be treated as a contract for sale of real estate, it would not help the defendants, for the reason that it cannot be said that they were free from fraud in failing to perform on their part when they had it in their power to perform, and refused performance without any legal or valid excuse. The contract, however, as we have said, is not one for the sale of real estate, but is one by which the plaintiff agreed to pay the defendants $6.25 for each thousand feet of lumber manufactured from their timber in accordance with the terms agreed upon. The contract as a whole indicates that the point at which the defendants ceased to be interested in the timber, and the
Nor is there any more merit in the contention that the true measure of damages is the difference between the market value of these logs as they would have been in the woods after the - trees were cut down by the defendants and the price of $6.25 per thousand feet, which the plaintiff had agreed to pay therefor. This was not the subject-matter that the defendants were contracting about. It was only a. part of it. What the contract contemplated, and what ■its full execution would have secured would have been manufactured lumber at the mill. . The parties by the terms of the contract itself measured their responsibilities to. each other by this standard, and the true measure of the damages to which the plaintiff would be entitled, if he shows a right to recover, would be the difference between the market value •of the product which would have been produced had .the contract been executed and the cost of producing the same. It is true, the evidence offered by the plaintiff as to the market value of such lumber as would have been manufactured from this timber is not entirely definite and certain, but then we must consider that the court declined to admit the evidence along this line, and no doubt the plaintiff only offered sufficient of the evidence which he had available to test the propriety of this ruling. The plaintiff’s manager does testify that he was acquainted with the market value of such lumber as would have been produced had this, eon-.tract been carried out; that he knows what it would cost to manufacture the lumber under the contract, and that there would be approximately 300,000 feet of it when the contract was completely executed, and that the profit on this would be $25.00 a thousand feet. This testimony does not in so many words say that the market value would have been $50.00 per thousand feet, but that is the effect of it.
The evidence offered by the plaintiff as to the amount expended by him in preparing to carry out the contract upon his part was properly rejected. This is not an element of
It follows from what we have said that the judgment complained of will be reversed, the verdict set aside, and a new trial awarded.
Reversed and remanded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- D. E. Lutz v. Rena U. Currence
- Status
- Published