20 Ind. App. 173 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1898
Appellant brought this action against appellee, a director of a manufacturing com
It is argued that the interrogatories were not properly submitted because no request in writing was made before the introduction of the evidence. The act of March 11, 1895, did not change the law as it then existed, giving the right to a party to have the jury find upon a part only of the material facts, but left the laAV in that respect substantially as it was
It appears from the bill of exceptions that after the evidence had closed and before the argument was begun, counsel for appellee said, “We desire to 'present interrogatories to the jury, have not yet reduced them to writing, and will ask a few moments time for that purpose;” that thereupon the court suggested that the argument might proceed while counsel prepared the interrogatories, if counsel for appellant did not object, and that counsel for appellant could comment on them in his closing argument, to which counsel for appellant replied, “Very well, I will proceed,” and made his opening argument; it further appears that the interrogatories were filed before the closing argument, were submitted to appellant’s counsel before the closing argument, and were used and commented on by him in his closing argument and were submitted to the jury by the court without any objection. As appellant did not object and except to the action of the court at the time, but substantially agreed to the submission of the interrogatories, the error, if one was committed, is not now available to appellant. Nor is the right to submit interrogatories to the jury after the evidence is closed a question which goes to the jurisdiction of the subject-matter, and one which, therefore, would not be waived by a failure to object. The statute, section 555, Burns’ R. S. 1894, does not designate the time when, during the trial, the request for answers to interrogatories shall be made, nor does the statute require that they be submitted to the opposite party. It is a matter necessarily largely within the discretion of the trial court and unless there is a clear abuse of discretion the action of the court will not be disturbed. Thus, in
The answers to the interrogatories show that in July, 1889, the D. E. Stone Furniture Company was incorporated with a capital stock of $50,000.00; that the entire capital stock was issued to a number of persons named, among them appellee, who paid the company the full face value of his stock; that appellee first became a director of the company in January, 1890; that during the time appellee was a director a part of the stockholders were insolvent so that the amounts unpaid upon .their stock could not have been collected by process of lawq and during said time all the other stockholders -were solvent, and their unpaid stock collectible; that while appellee was a director all the other directors, who owned a large majority of the stock and who had not paid the same in full, were insolvent; that there was never a time while appellee wrns director when he could have procured a majority of the board of directors to have taken action to collect from the delinquent stockholders the amount due from them for stock, that appellee never ordered or assented to the failure of the company to collect the full amount due upon the stock it had issued.
It is argued that the verdict is not sustained by suf
No complaint is made of the instructions given to the jury by the court, and they were certainly as favorable to appellant as could have been asked. The answers of the jury to the interrogatories are supported by some evidence. The facts found in the answers to the interrogatories are entirely inconsistent with the general verdict. The essential fact that the violation of the statute was ordered or assented to by appellee is negatived by the jury, and we cannot but conclude that the trial court did right in rendering judgment in appellee’s favor upon the answers to the interrogatories notwithstanding the general verdict. Judgment affirmed.