Court Opinion

ID: 8175600
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 22:20:42.890029+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:39:56.594350
License: Public Domain

Dent, Judge:
Writ of error of the Monongahela River Consolidated Coal & ■Coke Compaq, defendant, to the judgment of the circuit court ■of Wayne county in favor of the Kenova Transfer Company, plaintiff, for the possession of a white pine barge or fuel flat, or in lieu thereof the sum of one thousand dollars.
The facts are as follows, to-wit:
On the 18th day of January, 1902, the agent of the plaintiff, E. R. Peck, entered into the following contract with S. D. Swa-ney, agent of the defendant:
“Kenova, W. Va., January 18th, 1902. The Monongahela River Cons. C. & C. Co. hereby sell to the Kenova Transfer Co., of Kenova, W. Va., two wrecks of coal boats, together with their contents, and all the coal that may have come out of said wrecks, lying on the bed of the river within a radius of 200 feet from each piece, located about 500 to 700 feet below the Kenova bridge, near the West Virginia shore.
“Also all pieces of wrecks not mentioned above lying in the 'Ohio river, from a point 100 feet below the' Kenova bridge to Virginia Point. All as lost by the steamer Tfred. Wilson/ Dec. •30th, 1901.
“In consideration of which the said Kenova Transfer Company hereby agrees to pay to the said Monongahela River Consolidated Coal & Coke Company the sum of fifty dollars ($50.00),. receipt of which is hereby acknowledged.
“Signed, M. R. C. C. & C. Co.,
“Per S. D. Swaney,
“Master Str. Peed Wilson.'”
■ Under this contract the plaintiff raised, brought to the shore •and repaired the fuel fiat in controversy, claiming the same as covered thereby. The defendant then seized and carried the sarde away. The plaintiff sued and recovered judgment, and the defendant complains thereof. The question raised depends ■entirely upop._ the evidence. The plaintiff proves by a strong •preponderance of the testimony that the fuel fiat is one of the wrecks named in the contract and purchased by it, and it is ¡almost clear on the defendant’s behalf that defendant’s agent, *547when be sold the fuel flat, thought it to be an ordinary coal barge, it then being covered by water, and that he did not intend to sell it if it were the fuel flat. It is a case of mistaken identity us to the property sold. The mistake from the evidence, which it is wholly unnecessary to set out in full, was on the part of the defendant, and had it sought to have had the contract rescinded, and offered to place the plaintiff in statu quo, it might 'have furnished a good defense to plaintiff’s suit. In total disregard of plaintiff’s rights, it determined to arbitrarily settle the controversy by an unlawful seizure of the fuel flat. 24 Am. ,& En. En. Law (2nd Ed.), 645. It now makes no offer to restore the plaintiff its money, or recompense it for raising and repairing the fuel flat, but stands purely on its legal rights. If there was any doubt as to the preponderance of the testimony, that doubt should be resolved in favor of the finding of the circuit court. Hysell v. Sterling Coal & Manufacturing Co., 46 W. Va. 158. But the evidence furnishes no doubt either as to the fuel flat having been one of the wrecks purchased, nor as to -$1,000.00 being the fair value therof, although there appears to have been a mistake on the part of defendant’s agent against which this Court, under the circumstances, is powerless to afford xelief.
The judgment is affirmed.

Affirmed.