64 N.J.L. 281 | N.J. | 1900
The opinion of the court was delivered by
At the trial the court directed the jury to-find by its verdict that the sum of $11,756.66, with interest,
The' plaintiffs contend that these are separate and distinct stipulations, and that only by suppressing the earlier oral agreement in favor of the later written authority can the controverted question of fact be eliminated from the case or taken from the jury. I do not know any rule of law that would compel the merger of the husband’s stipulation with his brokers into that made with them by the wife. The two agreements were not at all alike, they did not have the same general object, and were not even between the same parties. At the time the earlier one was made, Mrs. Pratt had no known interest in the fund in the hands of Boody & Company, while Boody & Company inferentially had. Later
In any event the direction of a money verdict for the defendant upon her set-off, was error. The case should have gone to the jury under instructions, unless the trial court felt constrained by the uncontradicted proof of the husband’s stipulation to direct a verdict for the defendant, because none could be rendered for the plaintiffs.
There must be a venire de novo.
For affirmance—The Chief Justice, Depue, Nixon, Hendrickson.
For reversal—Dixon, Garrison, Lippincott, Gummere, Ludlow, Collins, Bogert, Adams, Vredenburgh. 9.