DocketNumber: No. 7811
Citation Numbers: 53 Wash. 604, 102 P. 450, 1909 Wash. LEXIS 1375
Judges: Fullerton
Filed Date: 6/17/1909
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/16/2024
The respondent brought this action against the appellant to recover a balance alleged to be due on a contract for the sale of lumber. The facts were stipulated, and are in substance these; The respondent is engaged in the business of manufacturing and selling lumber, and operates a lumber mill at Aberdeen, Washington. The
Soon after the orders had been accepted by the respondent, and before any action had been taken towards filling them, they became lost or destroyed through the acts of one Rowland, an employee of the respondent. Immediately on discovering the loss, about November 25, 1905, the respond- ■ ent sent to the appellant a telegram as follows: “Send immediately duplicates of last orders. Rowland took our copies.” In response to the telegram, the appellant forwarded what purported to be copies of the original orders, but which in fact differed from them materially; the copy of the one omitting two considerable items of lumber contained in the original, and the other showed the freight rate which the' respondent was to pay to be limited to 50c. per hundred, whereas the original order provided that the respondent should pay the entire freight to the point of destination.
Some nine months later the respondent filled the orders according to the copies, whereupon the appellant discovered for the first time that a mistake had been made in the copies, and requested the respondent to fill the orders according to the originals. The price of lumber had advanced materially since the original orders were given, and the respondent refused to comply with the request. The appellant thereupon purchased in the open market the lumber omitted from the original order, paying therefor $159.44 in excess of the price for which the respondent agreed to furnish the same. It also paid the freight in excess of the 50c. rate, amounting to $42.33. These sums it charged to the respondent’s account, and their total constitutes the sum sued for in this action.
In so far as the court allowed the respondent to recover for the sum withheld to replace the omitted items of lumber, we think its judgment right. The appellant, it is true, was under no obligation to supply the respondent with copies of the original orders. It could have refused, and if the respondent failed to furnish the lumber according to the orders within a reasonable time, could have recovered against it for breach of contract. But when it undertook to duplicate the original orders at the respondent’s request, whether gratuitously or not, it was bound to exercise ordinary care in the performance of the undertaking. And it was not ordinary care, we think, for the appellant to omit in its copy two principal items of the original. The separate items in the statement were not numerous; being in fact only ten in number. Even a casual effort at comparison after the copy was made would have discovered the error, and not to discover it was negligence.
Since the loss occurred as the result of the appellant’s negligence, it follows that it must bear it. In this connection, however, it makes the contention that there is no proof that the respondent will suffer loss by being required to make good the omitted items, or that it will suffer any loss by reason of the error, since it would have been required to furnish the missing items had it not lost the original orders. But the stipulation shows that it cost the appellant the sum of $159.44 in addition to the contract price to procure the lumber described in the omitted items in the open market, and
With reference to the freight item, we think the judgment wrong. The respondent obligated itself to pay the entire freight charges, and there was no new contract in this regard, nor any evidence or presumption that the respondent was injured in any manner by this mistake.
The judgment appealed from will be reversed, and remanded with instructions to modify the judgment in accordance with this o’pinion.
Rudkin, C. J., Gose, Dunbar, Mount, Chadwick, and Crow, JJ., concur.