Appellee recovered judgment for $800 to compensate the damage sustained by him from the breach of an alleged contract of employment to haul and load the timber off a certain section of land owned by appellant. In making the contract which was made appellant was represented by one Keys, who is described as being the “woods superintendent” of the appellant, and a certain writing was made by Keys at the time of which the following is a copy:
“Co. Timber — Cut.
Co. Timber Haul ..........................................................................................$2.00
Co. Timber Load .....................................................................................50
Sec. 17-3-17.
Hawthorne Timber.
Cut .....................................................................................:.........................................65
Timber ..................................................................................................................... 1.70
Haul .................................................................................•............................................. 2.15
$4.50
Loading .....50
$5.00
J. D. Keys.
3-22-16.”
It is at once apparent that this writing is not itself the contract, hut is a mere memorandum which is made intelligible not only by parol testimony explaining its meaning.
There is no controversy about the Hawthorne timber referred to in the memorandum, hut the litigation concerns'the timber on Section 17. Appellee testified.that he was given the exclusive contract to haul all timber on this section of land at $2 per thousand with an additional fifty cents per thousand for loading, and that to comply with this contract he bought additional teams at a cost to himself of $1,200. Appellee’s own testimony was legally sufficient to support a finding that such a contract had been made as he testified to, and in this contention he was corroborated by three other witnesses.
The existence of this contract was flatly denied by Keys, who testified that the contract was only to pay $2 per thousand for such timber as was hauled and fifty cents for the loading, but that no exclusive right to log the section was given, and much testimony was offered in support of this contention.
These conflicting questions of fact, however, have been settled by the verdict of the jury in appellee’s favor, and that finding is binding on us.
It is earnestly insisted, however, that the contract which appellee claims to have made was void for the want of mutuality; and that is the real question in the case. This contention is based upon appellee’s answer to the following question:
“Q. Was there anything in the contract that bound you to continue hauling until that section was finished and all the logs taken off ?
“A. Not that I know of. I asked Keys how much he wanted me to put in and he said just as much as you can, two or three cars a day. He said he doing that for the Neimeyer Lumber Company.”
We do not think this answer is conclusive of the fact that appellee had a contract which permitted him to haul as much timber as he pleased and no more. Such a contract would have been void, as was expressly decided in the case of Grayling Lumber Co. v. Hemingway, 124 Ark. 354, where we said that a contract was not enforcible, through lack of mutuality, where defendant hired the plaintiff to haul logs at certain rates, as plaintiff alleged, for an entire year, where the plaintiff was in no way bound to perform. The jury might have understood from the answer set out above that the witness understood that he was being asked whether he could quit temporarily or whether, on the other hand, it was expected of him that his hauling and loading be continuous until the entire section had been cleared, for the witness had testified unequivocally that he had a contract to haul all the timber on this section, and such a contract would have required that all timber be hauled, and not such portions only as appellee saw fit to haul.
It is finally insisted that the judgment was rendered for an excessive amount. But this cannot be true if the testimony of appellee is to be accepted, and this we must do in testing the legal sufficiency of the evidence. He testified that there were between four and five million feet of timber in that section, and that he was only able to haul about one hundred and fifty thousand before other teams were employed, and that he had only hauled about half a million feet before the job was completed. That the hardest and least profitable part of the job consisted in the haul from a portion of the section referred to as the bottoms, and that he had done this hauling before the other teams were put on the job, and that on the remainder of the land he could easily have made a dollar per thousand profit on the haul. This testimony would have supported a much larger verdict than the $800 which the jury found to be the amount of the damages.
No error appearing, the judgment is affirmed.