47 Neb. 21 | Neb. | 1896
This was an action by the defendant in error Louis Burg, doing business as the L. Burg Manufacturing Company, against the plaintiff in error, the Baum Iron Company, in the district court for Douglas county. The cause of action' alleged is a quantity of hickory axles, amounting, at the contract price, to $282.87; also, certain double-trees and wagon-hounds, amounting to $4.25, making a total demand of $287.12. It is alleged that as one of the conditions of the contract with respect to the said property it was mutually agreed that it should be examined and accepted on behalf of the defendant below by one Hatrick at Farmington, Iowa, at which point it was to be delivered on the cars billed to the defendant at Omaha, in this state, and that his selection should be final and binding upon the parties. It is further alleged that the property above described was selected by said Hatrick pursuant to said agreement and shipped to the defendant below, by whom it was received June 10, 1890. The allegations of the petition are denied by the answer, accompanied by a counter-claim in which it is charged that the plaintiff below agreed to furnish to the defendant therein at Farmington, Iowa, certain wagon timbers of substantially the character described in
The first assignment to which our attention is. directed by the brief of counsel for the plaintiff in error is that the district court erred in receiving-in evidence the answers to certain leading questions. The extent to which leading questions may be allowed is a subject which rests in the discretion of the trial court, and as we have frequently had occasion to hold, its rulings in that respect will not, in the absence of a clear abuse of discretion, be disturbed by this court. (Obernalte v. Edgar, 28 Neb., 70; St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Gotthelf, 35 Neb., 357.) The other assignments all relate to the giving and refusing of instructions.
The court, on its own motion, gave the following, to which exception was taken: “Fraud is not to be presumed, but must be established by the evidence. In the consideration of the question whether or not fraud was practiced upon the defendant in the selection of the axles in question,, you must consider all the facts and circumstances-attending the transaction and surrounding the-parties as they appear from the evidence. While fraud is not to be presumed, it can seldom be established by direct evidence, and in considering the question you must consider all the evidence in regard to the acts of the parties and circumstances of the case. If you find from a consideration of all the evidence that the selection of the axles was fraudulent, or that Hatrick acted fraudulently or dishonestly in making such selec
Counsel also vigorously assail instruction No. 10, given at the request of the plaintiff below, as follows: “The plaintiff asks the court to instruct the jury that there is no dispute, either in the pleadings or between the parties in this case, that one Henry Hatrick was selected by the plaintiff and defendant to make selection of the axles in controversy, and that the defendant only seeks to
Complaint is made of the refusal of certain instructions requested by the defendant below, but they were, in so far as they state the law of the case, embodied in those given by the court on its own motion.
We discover in the record no substantial error, and the judgment is accordingly
Affirmed.