108 Me. 103 | Me. | 1911
This is an action for money had and received in which an account in set-off was filed by the defendants. This is the third time the case has been tried. Before the first trial counsel for the plaintiff and defendants met in one of their offices and agreed that upon the trial all the items in the defendants’ account in set-off were admitted except one large charge of $325. The case was tried upon the issue thus agreed upon with a verdict for the plaintiff. The verdict was set aside. The case was again tried under the same agreement with a verdict for the plaintiff. This verdict was also set aside. Before the third trial plaintiff’s counsel informed defendants’ counsel that the agreement upon which the two former trials had proceeded would be abrogated and that upon this trial the plaintiff would not admit the validity of any item in the defendants’ set-off. It is not in controversy that the agreement between counsel upon which the first two trials proceeded was made in the absence of and without the consent of the plaintiff. The admissions, as above stated, upon which the case was tried at the first and second trials were agreed upon by counsel at the third trial without the introduction of any evidence. The plaintiff’s attitude towards the admissions was admitted, and stated by his counsel as follows: "Mr. Currie would not agree with me, and did not authorize me to make an agreement with my brother, but I made it just the same, without his consent. At the second trial I think it was practically agreed, but he testified as you will find in the printed case, that that agreement was unauthorized, and I had no right to make it, and that he forbid me doing it, which he did.” The court: "But you still stuck to it?” Mr. Shaw: "I did at
To discover the precise question raised by the exceptions, it is necessary to determine the true import of the admissions; whether they were made for the purposes of" the trial, or generally, with intent to eliminate the items involved from all future consideration. As before observed, the terms and purposes of the admissions were agreed upon by counsel in the presence of the court and jury during the progress of the trial, and assumed the form of an agreed statement upon this particular issue. Whatever they agreed upon, or whatever either counsel asserted, if undisputed, became a statement of fact, by which the parties must be bound and the case decided. Thorndike v. Inhabitants of Camden, 82 Maine, 39. So far as appears in the statement of counsel upon either side, the only purpose for which the admissions in question were made is found in the recitals of defendants’ counsel, in which it twice occurs,
Upon this state of facts upon the approach of the third trial the plaintiff’s counsel, as already seen, gave notice that he should withdraw his admissions and demand proof of every item in the defendants’ account in set-off. Therefore the precise issue in this case is whether the admissions made for the purposes of one trial are conclusive upon the party making them in another trial when, such party before the beginning of the trial has given notice of his intention to withdraw the admissions and demand proof of the admitted items.
Upon this issue the law seems to be well settled. If not universally so held, the great weight of authority favors the rule that where admissions by counsel are made for a specific purpose they are to be confined to that purpose. Holley v. Young, 68 Maine, 215, is cited in opposition to this rule; but a careful consideration of the
Perry v. Simpson Waterproof Mfg. Co., 40 Conn. 313, is, however, a complete precedent. In this case the facts show that upon a former trial between the same parties the counsel for the defendant, a corporation, had admitted their incorporation and that certain persons were officers of the company at a certain time. A second trial was had, previous to which counsel for the defendants gave notice of their withdrawal of the admissions at the former trial. The plaintiff contended that the admissions were binding upon the second trial. The court upon this point say: "We are quite prepared to give our assent to the doctrine insisted on by the defendants’ counsel, at least so far as to hold, that admission of a fact made on and for the purposes of one trial, does not bind the party thus making it, so as to prevent him from disputing that fact at another trial.” The defendant raised the further issue that
To the same effect is Nowell v. Drake, 28 Kansas, 265, in which Brewer, Judge, later Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, held that if an admission was made "for the purposes of the trial only, and so understood by the parties at the time, it would not be binding upon the plaintiff now.” Weisbrod v. The Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co., 20 Wisconsin, 441, is also in point. In this case at a former trial the defendants’ attorney made an admission as to the amount of the plaintiff’s damages in case he was entitled to recover at all. The case does not show as a matter of fact that this admission was confined to the trial for which it was made, yet the court say: "We think the court mistook the effect of the admission of Mr. Edmonds (the attorney for the defendant) upon the former trial, as to the amount of damages sustained by the plaintiff. Such admissions are frequently made for the purpose of saving time, where counsel are confident of success upon some other point; and when so made they are always understood to have reference to the trial then pending, and not as stipulations which shall bind at any future trial.” For analogous cases see Baldwin v. Gregg, 13 Metcalf, 253; Boileau v. Rutlin, 2 Exch. 665; Dennie v. Williams et als., 135 Mass. 28, and cases cited.
An examination of the authorities cited by the defendants will show that they applied to unlimited agreements. Prestwood v. Watson, 111 Ala. 604, cited in Wigmore, sec. 2593, upon this point excepts limited admissions in this language: "But if by their terms they are not limited, etc., they are receivable on any
Under the facts in this case the entry must be,
Exceptions overruled.