DocketNumber: No. 14748
Citation Numbers: 103 Wash. 399, 174 P. 645, 1918 Wash. LEXIS 1084
Judges: Parker
Filed Date: 8/19/1918
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
— The plaintiff Norris-Short Company seeks recovery of damage which it claims as the result of the failure of the defendant Everson Mercantile Company to deliver to it fifteen tons of potatoes in pursuance of a sale contract therefor, entered into between them. Trial in the superior court for What-com county, sitting with a jury, resulted in verdict and judgment in favor of the defendant, from which -the plaintiff has appealed to this court.
Appellant rests its claim upon the contract as being wholly in writing, and the failure of respondent to deliver the potatoes within the time specified in the writing, which it claims is a duplicate of the contract, at the time of entering into it. Respondent rests its defense upon the theory that no time of delivery was specified in the written portion of the contract, and that as to the time of delivery the contract was oral. The contract in so far as it was in writing was on a blank printed form and evidently intended to be signed in duplicate, so that each party would have a duplicate. The one retained by appellant now has in the blank space for specifying time of delivery, the words “during January,” while that space is left blank in the one retained by respondent. It is claimed by respondent that these words were written in appellant’s duplicate after the making of the contract. The potatoes were not delivered in January, but delivery thereof was tendered by respondent later. The time of delivery was not agreed upon specifically in the oral portion of the contract as claimed by respondent to have been made. It became a question of reasonable time for delivery, under the oral portion of the contract as claimed by respondent.
Appellant’s motion for a new trial was also made upon the ground of newly discovered evidence. The denial by the court to grant the motion upon this ground is also claimed as erroneous. There áre no affidavits or other evidence embodied in the statement of facts touching this ground of the motion. We therefore cannot know what affidavits or other evidence was before the trial court upon which its decision upon this ground of the motion was rested, so we are unable to say that the court’s decision thereon was erroneous. Kuykendall v. Lambie, 99 Wash. 366, 169 Pac. 853.
The judgment is affirmed.
Main, O. J., Mitchell, Tolman, and Fullerton, JJ., concur.