65 Mich. 360 | Mich. | 1887
This case is an action of assumpsit brought in the superior court of Grand Rapids, to recover for the value of two boat-loads of lumber, which the plaintiff claims to have sold in 1882 to the defendant. The plaintiff obtained judgment for $54=2, and defendant brings error.
The plaintiff on the trial claimed that he in person sold to the defendant’s lawful agent for purchasing the lumber in question, and that he caused the same to be delivered to the defendant. On the contrary, the defendant’s theory was that it purchased the lumber at Grand Rapids of Buchanan & Mizner, and of whom its agent had for some time previous been buying lumber, and to whom the plaintiff had been making consignments.
The plaintiff had been- running a saw-mill at Allendale, Ottawa county, in the fall of 1882, and, after closing up his dealings with Buchanan & Mizner, as the testimony tended to show, had about two boat-loads of lumber left, consisting partly of ash and partly of maple, and it was this lumber the plaintiff claims to have sold to the defendant company
The questions as to who was the owner of the lumber when sold, by whom and to whom it was sold, and the quantity thereof, were questions of fact fairly submitted to the jury, and we find no error in the rulings in admitting or rejecting testimony, and therefore the verdict must stand, unless erroneous instructions were given in the charge, to the various portions of which 22 exceptions were taken. One of these, however, is abandoned. The court gave the entire charge upon his own motion,.and without-reference to the requests presented by counsel. This is not unfrequently the most satisfactory way of instructing the jury, and, when this is done, “ isolated sentences cannot be allowed to be considered apart from their context ” (Lake Superior Iron Co. v. Erickson, 39 Mich. 499) j and “it is not expected that each clause and sentence in a charge shall be correct to an absolute certainty. The charge is to be taken as a whole, with
“ The multiplication of points and requests in cases where the issues are not complicated is of injurious tendency, and calculated to confuse both courts and juries, and impede the' administration of justice;” and, if the court instructs the-jury upon all the essential features of the case, that is sufficient. Kimball & Austin Manfg Co. v. Vroman, 35 Mich. 332; Fraser v. Jennison, 42 Id. 236.
We think that was done in this case, and, no error appearing in the record, the judgment must be affirmed.