98 Neb. 307 | Neb. | 1915
Action for damages by a landlord against a tenant for the negligent destruction of the leased premises by fire. Plaintiff recovered, and defendant appeals.
Plaintiff was the owner of a one-story frame store building in Panama, Nebraska, which was leased to defendant for a year. Defendant was largely engaged in the business of purchasing butter, eggs, poultry and cream, and the building was used as one of its purchasing stations. The petition charges, in substance, that on account of the carelessness and negligence of the agents of the defendant while acting within the scope of their employment the building caught fife and was totally destroyed; that there was no insurance on the building, and that the same was a total
The first defense is that the court had no jurisdiction, for the reason that defendant is a Nebraska corporation having its principal place of business in Douglas county; that it has no place of business in Lancaster county nor managing agent therein; and that Samuel Johnson, upon whom the summons was served, was not its managing-agent nor an officer of defendant, but a mere laborer.
Por a second defense it pleads a provision of the lease by which it took the building subject “to the usual wear, inevitable accident, and loss by fire,” and denies that it was guilty of negligence.
The conversation had with the witness Snyder, which was had the day before the fire started, is relevant and material, not on account'of its being an admission concerning any act of Baker’s or a threat, but merely as indicating a negligent and careless state of mind on his part. Its value as evidence was for the jury.
The statement made to Johnson two or three days after the fire was in the main self-exculpatory and could not be prejudicial. The other part of the statement, that Baker remembered candling the eggs, could not be prejudicial, since it was undisputed that Baker had said at the time he left the store, a few minutes before the fire, that he had done so.
It is next assigned that plaintiff’s counsel was guilty of improper conduct because he commented upon the absence of Mr. Baker as a witness. This was within the limits of legitimate argument. The absence of a material witness may usually be commented upon.
It is a close question whether the evidence is sufficient to sustain the verdict; and yet, when the whole testimony
The judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.