192 A. 11 | Vt. | 1937
The action is contract. Plea a general denial, payment and statute of limitations. Defendant also filed a declaration in offset. Trial was by jury. Plaintiff had a verdict and judgment below. The case is here on his exceptions.
The first question is whether evidence offered by plaintiff to show that a note given to him by defendant included an agreement to pay interest thereon was properly excluded. Neither party was able to produce the note. The plaintiff was a witness in his own behalf and testified on direct examination that he could not say whether or not the note contained such an agreement. He was then asked: "Are you in the habit of taking notes without interest?" This was excluded subject to plaintiff's exception. It was held in Hine v. Pomeroy,
In November, 1929, plaintiff sold defendant nine yearling heifers that he got from one Hewlett a short time before. The plaintiff testified that defendant agreed to pay $290 for them, while defendant claimed that he was to pay only $250. This being the situation, plaintiff offered to show that he gave Hewlett two cows of an agreed value of $140 and $135, respectively, and $15 in cash, in exchange for them. This was excluded, apparently on the sole ground that it was a "swap" transaction, as the court termed it, instead of a "cash deal." The court also refused to permit plaintiff to testify that the agreed value for the cows was their fair value, although he had qualified as an expert on the value of such property to the satisfaction of the defendant. To both of these rulings the plaintiff excepted.
Since the evidence was conflicting as to the price defendant was to pay for the heifers, it was competent to show their value at the time he bought them, as tending to show what the contract price in fact was.Kidder v. Smith,
The fact that plaintiff paid for them, in part, with other property, did not affect the admissibility of such evidence. Carr v. Moore,
After the verdict was returned, and before judgment thereon, the plaintiff filed a motion to set it aside because against the evidence, against the weight of the evidence and against the instructions of the court. The motion was denied, and plaintiff excepted. In view of our conclusion as to the previous exception, a consideration of this one is unnecessary.
The plaintiff has filed a petition for new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence. But since he will have an opportunity to avail himself of the benefit of such evidence under our disposition of the main case, there is no occasion to consider this petition.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded. Petition for new trialdismissed. *34