The opinion of the court was delivered by
Veazey, J.The action is general assumpsit for a quantity of logs sold and delivered to the defendant. The plaintiffs stand upon an alleged sale completed in all respects, with nothing remaining to be done except payment. The objection to the form of action is therefore without avail. The defence more particularly relied upon is the Statute 'of Frauds. The contract price was above $40, and nothing in earnest or part payment was given. A letter written by .the defendant in answer to and acceptance of a verbal proposal of sale of the logs by the plaintiff’s was put in evidence ; but that is not relied upon by the plaintiffs to take the case from the operation of the statute. There is some doubt whether it constituted a sufficient memorandum for that purpose; even if the contract had not been subsequently altered. It was the only memorandum ever made, and after that the parties modified the contract as therein expressed, but not as to the price per thousand feet. ' This *56action is, as any action must be, predicated upon the altered contract. Dana & Henry v. Hancock, 30 Vt. 616. When the letter was put in evidence the fact of subsequent alteration had not appeared. If the court was in error in admitting the letter as a sufficient memorandum to satisfy the Statute of Frauds, it became harmless error under the changed aspect of the case when the evidence of the alteration came in. We understand the exception to the admission of the letter was that it was not a sufficient memorandum of the contract to meet the requirements of the statute. It was admissible in connection with the plaintiffs’ testimony as tending to show the price.
The ground of the plaintiffs’ contention is that the Statute of Frauds is not a defence, because the case shows a complete sale, including delivery and acceptance. In this we think they axe right. The exceptions state there was no dispute between the parties as to the terms of the contract. It was a sale of all the plaintiffs’ logs in the mill-yard of a third person. The parties saw the logs there, and the defendant agreed to take them at $15 per thousand, with the right to throw out one-fourth part of the lumber cut from them, as he might select. The defendant was to pay for the sawing, and directed as to it. The plaintiffs had no duty in respect to the sawing. The logs were all sawed and the defendant took away the boards, tin-owing out as he saw fit, until he had taken all but six or seven thousand feet, and measured them as he took them, and all without notice to the plaintiffs or participation on their part. The case further states that the court submitted the case to the jury under a charge not excepted to. If there was an acceptance of the logs at the time of the contract the defendant had no defence. It would seem so far as appears that the question of acceptance was the only fact in dispute. The evidence plainly tended to show an acceptance. The verdict therefore necessarily implies the finding of an acceptance. As the evidence tended to show an acceptance the court was clearly right in refusing to direct a verdict for the defendant.
*57But if this case stood upon a report of an auditor wherein all the facts were found which the evidence tended to show, but without an express finding of an acceptance, we think such facts would warrant a judgment for the plaintiffs. The case is distinguishable from that of Gorham v. Fisher & Roberts, 30 Vt. 428, which came up on an auditor’s report, for the reason that this bill of exceptions, as we interpret it, shows a sale of logs as logs, not as boards, as the court construed the report in the case last cited. The essential difference is that in the case at bar the defendant took the logs into absolute control, to work up as he saw fit, without any duty whatever on the part of the plaintiff's. In the cáse supra the court construed the report as showing a sale of lumber to be made of a certain lot of logs, subject to' delivery and acceptance when the logs should be sawed into boards by the plaintiff.
Judgment affirmed.