(DOWNLOAD) "Bursaw v. Pederson" by Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts # eBook PDF Kindle ePub Free
eBook details
- Title: Bursaw v. Pederson
- Author : Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts
- Release Date : January 29, 1933
- Genre: Law,Books,Professional & Technical,
- Pages : * pages
- Size : 60 KB
Description
PIERCE, Justice. This is an action to recover upon an account annexed for the sale of gasoline, oil and motor accessories. The only items in dispute were those relating to gasoline, the defendant contending that the plaintiff did not deliver the amount of gasoline claimed. The case was referred to an auditor who filed a report in favor of the plaintiff. Each party filed a motion for judgment. The plaintiff's motion was allowed and the defendant duly excepted. The auditor found the following facts: The plaintiff, in support of the items in the declaration, offered his ledger account showing charges against and credits to the defendant named in the account, together with the plaintiff's daily sales slips made out in duplicate by the drivers who made deliveries to the defendant. One copy of these slips had in each instance been left with the defendant and the other was turned in by the driver to the plaintiff's bookkeeper and entries in the ledger account were posted directly from such slips to the ledger. The sales slips in possession of the plaintiff were produced and offered as an exhibit. The auditor states that he made the preliminary finding required by G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 233, § 78, and admitted both slips and ledger account as exhibits. He further found that the defendant began buying his gasoline, oil and other supplies from the plaintiff sometime in the early twenties and continued so to do down to and including the month of September, 1928. (The plaintiff's writ is dated October 10, 1928.) The deliveries of gasoline by the plaintiff to the defendant were made by the plaintiff's drivers from a tank wagon into a tank owned by the defendant and located under ground on the defendant's premises. The method of ascertaining the number of gallons of gasoline delivered into the tank of the defendant was for the driver of the plaintiff's truck to insert a stick into the tank for the purpose of ascertaining the amount of gasoline in the tank prior to any new delivery; by means of certain marks on the stick the amount of gasoline could be estimated or computed by the driver and the tank would then be filled to its full capacity. The amount of gasoline in the tank before any new gasoline had been put in was deducted from the number five hundred and sixty-five (the capacity in gallons of the tank) and the balance was charged for by the plaintiff as the amount of gasoline delivered. The stick was not a sealed measure.