90 W. Va. 652 | W. Va. | 1922
Plaintiff sued in assumpsit for recovery of a balance of $1779.46 and interest, alleged to be due on account of coal sold defendant. Defendant pleaded non-assumpsit and also filed a special plea of set-off, in which it claimed a balance of $6,308.75 for loss by reason of the fact that the coal shipped it by plaintiff had to be re-classified. After introduction of all the evidence of the parties the court, over defendant’s objection, directed the jury to find for the plaintiff for the full amount of his claim, and entered judgment on the verdict so found; defendant’s motion to set aside the judgment and award it a hew trial being .overruled, it obtained a writ of error to this court. Defendant assigns as error the court’s action in directing a verdict for plaintiff. The true test in such *cases is whether if the jury had found for the other party, the court could have allowed the verdict to stand. Diddle v. Continental Insurance Co., 65 W. Va. 170, 63 S. E. 962; Potts v. Union Traction Co., 75 W. Va. 212, 83 S. E. 918; Siever v. Coffman, 80 W. Va. 420, 92 S. E. 669; Vance v. Frantz, 83 W. Va. 671, 99 S. E. 12.
Plaintiff is a coal broker, living at Bluefield; defendant is a corporation, having offices at Huntington, West Virginia; Norfolk, Virginia; and New York, and is engaged in buying coal for resale.
On August 3, 1920, defendant purchased from plaintiff 50 cars run of mine coal for pools 5, 6 and 7 of the Tidewater Coal Exchange and of quality and preparation satisfactory to them. All shipments were to be of merchantable
The evidence of the plaintiff is clear and free from uncertainty. It shows that he shipped the coal at the stipulated price and defendant accepted it and paid for all the coal except it made a deduction of $3.25 per ton on 10 cars; that defendant' refused to pay this item because it claimed the 10 cars were rejected, when in fact they had been accepted and sold. On the other hand, the defendant’s evidence is so uncertain and so unsatisfactory that we do not think the case should have been submitted to the jury, and if it had been, and the jury had returned a verdict in defendant’s favor, it would have been the duty off the court to set it aside. The court was therefore justified in directing a verdict in plaintiff’s favor and it would have been error not to have done so. Diddle v. Insurance Co., 65 W. Va. 170, 63 S. E. 962. We, therefore, affirm the judgment.
Affirmed.