106 Minn. 20 | Minn. | 1908
Defendants and appellants let a contract for the remodeling of their house to one Zauft, who sublet part of the work to plaintiffs and respondents. Plaintiffs claimed that they undertook to finish the house more elaborately than was originally contemplated, that they subsequently entered into an oral contract with defendants whereby plaintiffs agreed to do the decorating and defendants to pay $250, that afterward defendants desired other changes and additions, and that plaintiffs fully performed their oral contract and did the work in a proper manner. Defendants insist, inter alia, that no such subsequent oral contract was made, that the work done by plaintiffs was
To prove the execution of the oral contract, the wife of one of the plaintiffs testified that she made in a book (offered in evidence) an entry of the materials and of the various contracts, amounts paid, etc. “If it was a contract, did you make a memorandum of that contract? A. I did. Q. Did you make a memorandum of the contract here in question between” [plaintiff and your husband] Mr. Deatherage and Mr. Petruschke? “A. I did. (I entered it in my book under the date of October 18th.) I know that the date on which this entry was made was the date upon which the contract was made to which that entry referred. I know the contract was entered in this book the day it was made. I remember distinctly of him [the respondent] coming in and ordering me to put this in the book. I received these facts in relation to what I call the contract from my husband.” The court, after some further proof by the husband himself and one of the defendants, admitted in evidence an exhibit, a part of the book, which contained the entry:
“10/18. Mrs. Petruschke.
To lining walls and painting three rooms and hall, 250.00.”
This was duly objected to, and, when the objection was overruled, an exception was taken. This exception was within the scope of the motion for a new trial. The admission of this evidence was here duly assigned as error and argued in this court. The question is properly before us for decision. Not the colloquy between counsel for plaintiff and the court on trial, nor what may have happened on the argument of the alternative motion in the court below, nor in the sending of the exhibit to the jury, nor any conduct on the part of the counsel for plaintiff, amounted to a waiver of his objection and exception.
The evidence quoted and the nature of the entry itself show that the exhibit was offered as a memorandum of a contract to prove the contract. It was made before any material had been furnished and
A case essentially similar to the one at bar, was presented in Hazer v. Streich, 92 Wis. 505, 66 N. W. 720. There a memorandum of a contract of sale was entered in books of account of the vendee by his wife, acting as his bookkeeper, at his direction. It was then read over by him. The court said: “It is very clear that it was not admissible as a book of account under the statute, because it is neither a charge nor a credit nor an entry that properly belongs to an account. A memorandum otherwise incompetent cannot be made admissible by being written in a book of account.” In this case it appeared that the wife had written the memorandum in the presence of the parties. In Michigan it is the rule that, where the memorandum is not made in the presence of either interested party, it is not admissible (Weaver v. Bromley, 65 Mich. 212, 31 N. W. 839), but that, where the memorandum of the agreement is made by one party in the immediate presence of the other party at the time the contract was
The error in receiving the exhibit was prejudicial. The evidence for plaintiff, additional to this entry, was far from being conclusive. Indeed, defendant’s argument that the verdict was not sustained by the evidence, based upon a fair examination of the record, is extremely cogent. In view of this conclusion it would be obviously improper to anticipate the future progress of the trial and the admission of another and different entry, in which the contract prices and many other terms were made at a later time.
Reversed and new trial ordered.