130 Mass. 186 | Mass. | 1881
This is an action of trespass quare clausum. The defendants attempted to justify under a license contained in a written agreement signed by the plaintiff, in the nature of a lease of certain articles of household furniture. The plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that, on June 11, 1877, she bargained with the defendants for a carpet, sofa and four chairs selected by her, which the defendants were to deliver at her house; that she paid $31.50 and signed the agreement to take effect upon such delivery; that the defendants sent to her house a carpet, sofa and four chairs, but the sofa and chairs were not those selected by her; and that she thereupon returned them to the defendants, and offered to keep the carpet and pay the difference between its price and the $31.50 paid by her as aforesaid. She contended that the agreement never became operative. The defendants contended that the sofa and chairs delivered were the same selected by the plaintiff; that the agreement became binding upon such delivery, and had not been rescinded or waived by them.
The plaintiff testified, among other things, that “ no demand had been made upon her or notice given to her for anything from June 11, 1877, until February 28, 1878, the time of the alleged« trespass.” This evidence was material. By the agreement, the plaintiff was to make payments of eight dollars on the 11th of each month. If the defendants made no claim, and took no steps to assert their rights under the agreement for more than eight months, this inaction, if unexplained, would naturally lead to the inference that they did not consider the agreement as binding, and would tend to support the plaintiff’s claim. To meet this evidence, the defendants offered to show “ that during said time they had sent letters to her, properly addressed to her at her residence in Boston, demanding payment of the rent or pay set forth in said lease contract; that said letters were sent by mail, duly stamped, with a request printed on the envelope that the letters should be returned to them, giving their proper address, if not delivered to the person to whom they were addressed ; the said letters never came back to them.” The court rejected this evidence.
We are of opinion that the evidence was admissible. It tended to rebut the inference, which might be drawn from their
The plaintiff now contends that the evidence was inadmissible, because the offer was to prove the contents of written papers not produced, and for the neglect to produce which no legal excuse is shown. The rejection by the Superior Court does not appear i to have been upon this ground, and we do not think it is tenable. The defendants had no control over the letters; it was not in their power to produce them; the plaintiff had testified that she never received them; and clearly a notice to her to produce them would be attended with no result, and would be a mere idle ceremony which the law did not require of the defendants.
Exceptions sustained.