In the suit of Anderson Lumber Company vs. Robinson, the ownership of the timber was decreed to be in the Lumber Company, and the .sequestration issued therein was perpetuated. There are no complaints on appeal which would authorize the reversal or modification of the judgment rendered in that case.
We will, therefore, direct our attention in this opinion to the judgment rendered in the case of Robinson vs. Anderson Lumber Company in which plaintiff, Robinson, claims the sum of $935.90 against the Lumber Company for loading and hauling timber. ¡.
The court below found that plaintiff was entitled to recover the sum of $275.00 for the 110,000 feet of lumber which had been seized, by Bradshaw, and bonded by the defendant company. The admissions in the answer of defendant and the proof adduced fully sustain the finding of the court for this item. The evidence shows that an item of $100.00 was charged for timber to plaintiff which was decreed to belong to the company. The court denied plaintiff this item. This was erroneous as plaintiff can not be charged for timber adjudged to defendant. The main contention is in reference to the claim of plaintiff in his brief for hauling 91,800 feet of timber. Plaintiff contends that according to his scaling he is entitled to recover for the hauling of these 91,800 feet of *461timber. Tbe solution of this contention depends on tbe question as to whether the scaling of the plaintiff or defendant company should be accepted. The District Judge ‘accepted the scale of defendant and denied this item.
The evidence shows that at the time plaintiff was employed, several other men were also engaged in loading and hauling timber for defendant company. These parties, or most of them, testified that to measure the timber the scale of the company was taken as controlling. Several witnesses said that in but few instances the scale of the company was always accepted by those hauling for defendant and other mills.
It is not reasonable to believe that a mill engaging employees to haul timber for it would allow them to do the scaling without the right of revision, and to have their own scale accepted in making settlements with them. Plaintiff says, however, ■that in this instance the defendant agreed to accept the scale he would make in the woods. This is flatly denied by Wood, one of the scalers of the company, and also by the Andersons, owners of the mill. On this point the preponderance of the evidence is with the company.
Plaintiff, testifying in rebuttal, said he never said Anderson agreed to -pay him off by “my scale”; that he thought if there were a little difference between them “we would get together and settle it”. Such evidence as this makes it quite clear that plaintiff’s scale was not to control, and that the scale of the company was to prevail. The whole trend of the evidence supports this conclusion which we find to be based on proper considerations. The court accepted the scale of the comp'any, as hereinabove stated. We find that the evidence supports this finding, and that there is certainly no such error on this issue to justify a reversal.
The judgment should, however, be increased in ■ the sum of $100.00, and, as thus amended, affirmed.
It is therefore ordered and decreed that as thus amended the judgment be and is hereby affirmed.