Colton v. King

Hoar, J.

A contract, which is prohibited by a statute, will not support an action, whether the prohibition is express oi implied. If therefore the contract upon which the plaintiff declares was made in violation of the express requirements of the law, the verdict cannot be sustained.

The defendant contends that the contract upon which the plaintiffs seek to recover was in express contravention of Rev. Sts. c. 28, § 200, which is as follows: “ All cord-wood exposed to sale shall be either four feet, three feet, or two feet long, including half the carf [kerf j; and the wood, being well and close laid together, shall measure in quantity equal to a cord of eight feet in length, four feet in width, and four feet in height.”

It is extremely difficult to give an interpretation to this statute, taken literally. Regarded as a matter of positive regulation, and construed as a prohibition of all sales of wood not within its terms, the latter clause would seem to prohibit the sale of any quantity of wood less or greater than an exact cord. The section was substantially copied from St. 1796, c. 67, § 1; but by a change of phraseology not felicitous, it provides that the “ wood,” instead of the “ cord,” shall be of certain specified dimensions. There is no express prohibition of the sale of wood of a different length, nor any penalty declared for a violation of the statute, except in subsequent sections for “ exposing to sale in any market, or upon any cart or other vehicle,” and for “ conveying from any wharf or landing place,” firewood that has not been measured by a sworn measurer, according to the requirements of the statute. Whether § 200 above quoted was intended by the legislature as anything more than a definition of what dimensions should constitute a cord, giving rights to the buyer corresponding to its provisions, and governing the public measurer in his official duty, requiring him to measure as three feet long wood which is not four feet in length, and as two feet that which is less than three, and not allowing wood less than two feet in length to be measured as cord-wood, is a question which may deserve further consideration. But for the decision of the *319principal question in this case it is sufficient to say, that we do not think the sale of a quantity of wood, piled upon and by the side of the land where it grew, is prohibited by law, although not of the length which the statute requires for cord-wood. If it were the intention of the legislature to forbid the sale of any firewood by the cord, which should not be four feet, three feet, or two feet long, we cannot understand the meaning of § 203, which regulates the measurement of wood brought by water, when it says, that “ for that purpose, the wood shall be corded and piled by itself in ranges, making up in height what shall be wanting in length.” That section was copied from Si. 1799, c. 26, § 1, which first extended the provisions of law for the measurement of wood, so as to require that wood brought by water should be measured before it was loaded upon a cart, and which was enacted at a time when it is said that the wood brought by coasters usually measured considerably less than four feet; though four feet, by the statute of 1796, was then the only length prescribed for cord-wood. The sections which provide for the measurement, and which fix the penalty for selling or conveying wood without the measurer’s certificate, are all of them (§§ 201, 203, 204) made applicable only to cases in which the wood has been removed from the place where it grew. The principal exception of the defendant must therefore be overruled.

But there is another exception which seems to us valid. The declaration is upon an account annexed, for 542f cords of wood. The proof was not of any number of cords sold, bút of a bargain by which a partial and imperfect measurement was agreed upon by which to fix the quantity to be paid for, the plaintiffs admitting that it did not give the true quantity. 'We are of opinion that a declaration for the sale and delivery of a certain number of cords of wood must be interpreted as meaning “cords” such as the statute defines, and is not supported by proof of a special agreement that a less quantity should be delivered and accepted as a cord under the contract between the parties. Hockin v. Cooke, 4 T. R. 315.

That this exception is sustained will not, however, necessarily *320require a new trial. The declaration may be amended after ver* diet, so as to correspond with the proof at the trial, as shown by the bill of exceptions, upon the terms required by the rules of the superior court, and the payment of the costs upon the exceptions ; and if the plaintiffs so amend, a new trial will net be ordered on account of the variance. Gen. Sts. c. 129, § 41.

Exceptions sustained.