The only question urged upon our consideration in the argument was, whether or not there was such a variance between the contract as set out in the declaration and that shown upon the trial, as to make it the duty of the court to direct a verdict for the defendant. This is an action upon the case, but no question is .made but that the plaintiff is bound to prove the contract upon which he relies, substantially as he has set it out in his declaration, the same as though he had declared in assumpsit. The plaintiff alleges that he delivered a quantity of wool to the defendants to be by them properly sorted and manufactured into cloth, for which he was to pay the defendants thirty cents per yard for each and every yard of cloth manufactured from the plaintiff’s wool, and that the defendants accepted and received said wool for the purpose of properly sorting and manufacturing it into cloth for the plaintiff, and then to deliver all the cloth which said wool would properly make, to the plaintiff for said sum of thirty cents, etc.
The case shows that the testimony of both parties tended to. prove that the defendants were not expected to keep the plaintiff’s wool separate and manufacture it by itself, but that they were to mingle it with other wools of other customers of like grade and quality, and give the plaintiff his fair share of the cloth and of *229the fair and average quality, from all the wools so mingled in the process of manufacture. It is in this that the variance is claimed to exist.
It may be observed that the esse dees not show what was said by the parties as to the manner in which the wool was to be manufactured, whether separately or by mixing it with that of other customers. If does appear that it was the custom in all woolen manufactories to mingle the wools of customers together, and to sort, manufacture and divide it, as was done in this case. For ought that appears, the expectation of the parties arose entirely from their knowledge of this custom, and not from anything that was said about it in making the agreement. The language of the contract may have been precisely that alleged in the declaration.
But however that may be, is there any substantial difference between the agreement as set forth in the declaration and that shown by the proof? What is meant by the words “properly manufactured,” as used in the declaration ? Evidently, that it should be well done, and in the usual manner. It is quite probable that in manufacturing wool into cloth it is more economical to work large quantities of the same grade together than to work it in separate lots, and that such is the practice in the factories. If so, it could hardly be said that a lot of wool was properly manufactured that was sorted into several small parcels and each parcel worked up by itself, thus producing a less quantity of cloth than would have been produced if the wool had been mixed with other wool of the same grade, and the cloth divided according to the relative proportions and in the usual manner.
Again, it is said in the declaration that the defendants were to “ deliver all the cloth which said wool would properly make that is, all the wool would make when well manufactured in the usual way. Looking at the language of the declaration in this light, it is clear that there is no substantial variance between the declaration and the proof. The evidence only gives the substantial meaning of the declaration more in detail and at length, but we think it substantially the same.
Judgment of the county court affirmed.