Court Opinion

ID: 8742114
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 10:52:52.108905+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:00:27.881316
License: Public Domain

GILBERT, Circuit. Judge,
after stating the cast; as above, delivered tlu; opinion of the court
The ruling of the circuit court in sustaining the demurrer was based upon the case of Brawley v. U. S., 96 U. S. 168, 24 L. Ed. 622,— a case in which the court: was required to construe a contract to furnish cord wood for an army post. The view which the court took of the contract in that case is set forth in the language of the opinion as follows:
"The contract was not for the delivery of any particular lot or any particular quantify, but to deliver at the post of Fort Pembina eight hundred and eighty cords of wood, ‘more; or less, as shall be determined to be necessary by the post commander for the regular supply, in accordance with army regulations, of the troops and employes of the garrison of said post, for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1871.’ These are the determinative words of the contract, and the quantity designated — eight hundred and eighty cords — is to be regarded merely as an estimate of what Hie officer making the contract at the time supposed might be required. The substantial engagement was to furnish what should be determined to be necessary by the post commander for the regular supply for the year, in accordance with army regulations.”
The contract which is under consideration in the present case, while similar in some respects to that in the Brawley Case, contains *500covenants upon the part of the defendant which are sufficient to except it from the governing principle of that decision. The covenant on the part of the plaintiff was to furnish all mining timbers “required and used” by the defendant for the year, and all lagging or cribbing timber. The provision that the latter should be delivered as requested “at the tunnels mentioned,” and “in the quantities designated,” by the defendant, has reference only to the place and method of the delivery, and not to the total quantity required and used. The defendant, upon his part, covenanted to pay the plaintiff for all mining timbers, “about six hundred,” and for all lagging and cribbing received by him, “about fifteen thousand.” Here is a distinct promise to receive and pay for about 600 pieces of one kind of timber, and 15,000 of another. The qualification imported by the word “about” is not such as to admit of any material variation from the quantity named. Said Mr. Justice Bradley in Brawley v. U. S.:
“The addition of the qualifying words ‘about,’ ‘more or less,’ and the like, in such cases, is only for the purpose of providing against accidental variations arising from slight and unimportant excesses or deficiencies in number, measure, or weight.”
The plaintiff, relying upon this covenant of the defendant, according to the allegations of the complaint, performed his part of the contract. He cut and prepared and had ready for delivery 600 pieces of the one class and 15,000 of the other class of timber, as specified in the contract. The defendant declined to receive more than 15 pieces of ,the first, and 2,000 of the second. Is he to be released from his contract because the plaintiff,, by the terms of the contract upon Ms part, stipulated to furnish Mm such timbers as should be required and used by him during the year, and because but a small proportion of the whole amount was in fact used? We think he must be held by the terms of his own covenants to pay for 600 of the one and 15,000 of the other kind of timber, as specified in the contract. The determining words of the contract are the quantities of timber which are specified in the defendant’s promise to pay, and not the words “all mining timbers required and used,” contained in the plaintiff’s covenants. The contract was not one in which the quantity of material to be delivered rested wholly in the will of him who was to receive it, n,or was it one of those in which the contracting parties had in mind the construction of a particular work, and the supply of the necessary material therefor; the work itself furnishing to both parties the ultimate measure of the quantity which the contract contemplated. We may assume from the complaint that the defendant alone had knowledge of the number of pieces of timber he would require. He expressed that knowledge in definite figures in the agree-' ment, and for the quantity thus expressed he promised to pay. The plaintiff, upon his part, has in good faith complied with his contract, and furnished the specified quantity. , It would not only be unjust, but contrary, we think, to the fair intendment of the terms of the contract, to deny Mm his right to recover. The judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with the foregoing views.