The action is brought to recover damages for failure to deliver according to contract 950 pounds of benzoic acid. The making, of the contract is denied; The contract claimed to have been made provided for the delivery by the defendant to the plaintiff of 1,000 pounds in December, 1917. In October of that year the defendant’s president, one Avstreih, brought to the broker, Huisking, a sample of benzoic acid
I am of the opinion, moreover, that a new trial should be granted for legal error committed by the trial judge. This sale was of benzoic acid which was to be manufactured by the defendant. The trial judge permitted the defendant to show its inability to manufacture any benzoic acid before December twenty-second and also the difficulty in getting raw material for such manufacture. This evidence was admitted as bearing upon the probabilities of the making of a contract; it was probably competent to show any facts existing at the time of the claimed making of the contract as bearing upon the issue whether, in fact, the contract was made, but what the defendant was able to do after that time, or what difficulty the defendant had in securing raw material thereafter, is entirely immaterial and irrelevant and the reception of such evidence was clearly. prejudicial to the plaintiff and calls for the reversal of this judgment. Criticism might be made of the manner in which objections were made to this evidence, but they were sufficiently explicit to call the court’s attention clearly to the plaintiff’s claim of irrelevancy, and the ruling of the trial judge was made in view thereof and allowed in evidence facts that would appeal to the sympathy of the jury, strongly tending to influence a verdict in behalf of the defend
Clarke, P. J., Laughlin, Shearn arid Merrell, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event.
