260 P. 150 | Idaho | 1927
Respondents' complaint contained three causes of action, of which only the second need be considered herein because the other two terminated in appellants' favor. The second cause alleged a sale in June, 1921, of 506,560 feet of green white pine sawlogs at the agreed net stumpage price and reasonable value of $17 per thousand, with prayer for judgment for the same, the price not having been paid. Appellants denied the contract and alleged that the sawlogs were purchased from Knous Brothers and had been fully paid for.
The evidence showed that about May, 1921, respondents made a contract with Knous Brothers to cut and deliver the sawlogs from respondents' timber land for $13 a thousand, the appellants to purchase the logs from respondents at $22 a thousand, $8 of which was to be paid to the plaintiffs, $13 to Knous Brothers, $1 being deposited in a Wallace Bank to secure faithful performance by said Knous Brothers. On June 15, 1925, Knous Brothers had delivered all the logs in question except 506,560 feet, which had been cut and skidded but which had not yet been hauled; respondents took the position that the first contract had been broken because *564 of failure to perform within the time limit and notified Knous Brothers to cease operations and notified appellants that the balance of the logs would be at $16 a thousand instead of $8 and contend a new contract was then made to that effect.
The several assignments of error fall within several groups; first, that the court erred in rejecting evidence offered by appellants to show that respondents had interfered with the performance of the original contract by Knous Brothers of May, 1921. Under the pleadings the only contract in issue was the one of June 15, 1923. Appellants denied this contract but did not allege a previous contract of May, 1921, or that there had been any interference therewith by respondents. The evidence offered, therefore, was not responsive to any issue made by the pleadings and was inadmissible.
Respondents took the testimony of one Bailey by deposition, the same containing direct and cross examination. At the trial respondents did not offer the deposition but appellants did. At the conclusion of the reading of the direct testimony respondents' objection to the cross-examination was sustained on the ground that the defendants by reading the deposition taken by the plaintiffs had made the witness their own and therefore could not cross-examine the witness. This ruling was incorrect. (Wigmore on Evidence, secs. 1389 and 2103; The Law of Depositions, Weeks, sees. 466 and 467; Von Tobel v. Stetson Post Mill Co.,
The question of whether the ruling, though erroneous and based on a misconception of the true rule of law, was prejudicial would depend upon whether the party had been injured by not having had the use of the cross-examination. Since this cross-examination is not in the record *565
it is impossible to decide that appellants were prejudicially affected by such ruling (Citizens Bank v. Rhutasel,
Appellants excepted to a statement by respondents' attorney to the effect that there was an error in the price as given in the deposition and that Mr. Bailey had come down to his office and requested that the bookkeeper be brought in (presumably to show such statement by Mr. Bailey), and the court immediately instructed the jury that they should not consider any statements made in the argument during the course of the trial. Such remark and offer were not erroneous or prejudicial. (Authorities supra.)
The verdict of the jury with respect to the second cause of action was as follows:
"We, the jury, impaneled to try the above entitled cause, do render this our verdict, and find as follows:
"Upon the plaintiffs' second cause of action we find for plaintiffs and against the defendant in the sum of...$8104.96
Int.... 263.20 ------- 8363.16
together with interest thereon at the rate of 7 per cent per annum."
The $263.20 was the interest computed up to the time of the commencement of the action. The first judgment entered did not award interest from the commencement of the action to the date of entry of judgment. It does not appear that counsel for appellants contend that respondents were not entitled to interest from the time of the commencement of suit, but contend that the court had no right to reform the judgment. It evidently was in the nature of a clerical mistake and the court's action relative thereto was not improper.
Appellants moved to strike the fees of certain of respondents' witnesses on the ground that they had not testified relative to the second cause of action. The court *566 struck some and denied the motion as to others. The testimony of some witnesses overlapped the three causes of action and the court's action in this regard was reasonably justified by the record.
Appellants also presented a cost bill for the fees of witnesses who testified with respect to the first and third causes of action, on the first of which the jury found for respondents, the third having been decided in favor of appellants by the court. In the absence of statute, and we have none, the respondents having obtained judgment for a part of the relief prayed for are prevailing parties, and as such are entitled to costs and no apportionment can be made for defendants even though there were several causes of action and the defendants be successful on some of them. (15 C. J. 27, 28;International Harvester Co. of America v. Schultz,
The judgment is therefore affirmed. Costs awarded to respondents.
Wm. E. Lee, C.J., and Budge, Taylor and T. Bailey Lee, JJ., concur.