1 S.D. 71 | S.D. | 1890
The plaintiff’s complaint alleges that in the year 1887, at the special instance and request of defendant, the plaintiff did and performed services for the defendant in digging, boring, driving, and constructing a well on its premises .in Marshall county, and that said services were reasonably worth $819, no part of which has been paid. To this complaint the defendant answered, denying each and every allegation thereof. At the close of the evidence the defendant requested the court to direct a verdict for the defendant, which request the court refused, , and defendant excepted. The cause was submitted to the jury, which rendered a verdict in favor of plaintiff, and assessed his damages at $467. The defendant thereupon moved for a new trial, alleging several distinct causes, both of law and of evidence, which motion was overruled by the court; and defendant appeals, and makes the following assignment of errors: “(1) The'court erred in sustaining plaintiff’s objection to the following question put to the plaintiff: ‘Didn’t you derive information from Inglis that such was the understanding?’ (2) In excluding evidence offered by defendant that the original contract between Inglis and defendant was modified. (3) In refusing the defendant’s request to direct a verdict in its favor. (4) In denying the defendant’s motion for a new trial, and refusing to set aside the .verdict for the reason that the evidence was insufficient to sustain it; and the appellant relies upon each of the particulars specified in the motion for a new trial.”
In considering the first assignment of error, it will be necessary to set out in full the evidence on the part of the plaintiff, which is as follows: "Plaintiff’s Evidence. E. W. Blood, the plaintiff, being sworn, testified: ‘In May, 1887, I hada conversation with Mr. Sayers, the agent of defendant. I went into his office, and said, Mr. Sayers, I want to put down this well for you;” and he said: “I don’t care who puts down the well; I want the well put down;” He was having a well put down for the defendant. Question. State anything further that occurred.
This was all the evidence offered by the plaintiff; and from tho view we have taken of this case, no other evidence need be cited. The agreement, if any existed between plaintiff and defendant, was an oral one; and the object of the testimony was to show the nature and extent of it. From this it is evident that the best construction which can be made of the evidence to sustain the plaintiff’s cause of action only tends to show a very loose, obscure, indefinite, and ambiguous agreement to do
•It may be claimed by plaintiff that, even if he succeeded to the Inglis agreement, his failure to get water was excused by the fact that defendant’s agent ordered him to stop work, and that he is entitled to recover whatever his labor is reasonably worth. It will be seen by the testimony that no time was specified in the original agreement for the completion of the well; but on the 7th day of April, Inglis agreed to abandon the work if he failed to get water within a certain time. The question was asked him if the time was not 40 days; and his answer is that it was 60 days, and that he quit work in about 10 days after
It is not necessary to consider the remaining assignment of errors, because for the errors above stated, the judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.