34 Mont. 237 | Mont. | 1906
delivered the opinion of the court.
The Donovan-McCormick Company brought this action to recover from the defendant Sparr the sum of $5,049.31, alleged to have been expended by the company for the use and benefit of Sparr and at his special instance and request.
The complaint alleges that T. C. Power, Paul McCormick, A. C. Johnson, and defendant Sparr purchased two hundred shares of the capital stock of the plaintiff company from W. H. Donovan for $20,197.23; that such stock was transferred to Paul McCormick, trustee, to be held for the parties named, in the following proportions: Power, fifty-six and one-quarter shares; McCormick, fifty-six and■ one-quarter shares; Johnson, thirty-seven and one-half shares; and Sparr, fifty shares; that this stock was paid for by the plaintiff company at the special instance and request of the above-named parties; that defendant Sparr’s proportion of the purchase price was $5,049.31, which he agreed to repay to the plaintiff, but failed and refused to do so. The answer admits that the plaintiff company paid for the stock mentioned the sum of $20,197.23, but denies every other material allegation of the complaint. The trial of the case re-
The record consists of the judgment-roll, without any bill of exceptions, and, of course, does not present any of the evidence. The errors assigned are the refusal of the court to give plaintiff’s requested instruction No. 7, and the giving of instructions Nos. 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, and 11.
If we assume that the particular fifty shares of stock were purchased for Sparr and that McCormick holds them in trust for him, still the showing of these facts alone would be wholly insufficient to charge Sparr with their purchase price. They may have been purchased for him without his knowledge or consent. He may never have requested that they be purchased for him, and he may never have agreed to pay for them. Any controversy over this subject, however, is set at rest by the recent decision of this court in Smith v. Perham, 33 Mont. 309, 83 Pac. 492. In that case the court instructed the jury that, if the plaintiff delivered the goods to defendant and defendant received them, he must pay for them. The giving of this instruction caused a reversal of the judgment. Among other things, this court said: “It is elementary that before a plaintiff can prevail he must put the defendant in the wrong. * * * In order to charge the defendant, the complaint must set forth an express contract, or a request, expressed or implied, on the part of the defendant for the goods, or the delivery of the goods by the plaintiff and a promise, expressed or implied, on the part of the defendant to pay therefor. * * * The mere delivery of goods by one person to another is not of itself sufficient
In Boyer v. Richardson, 52 Neb. 156, 71 N. W. 981, the same rule is announced as follows: “It is elementary law that in order to recover money paid to the use of another, where the party paying was under no obligation so to do, the payment must have been moved by a previous request from the party to whose use the money was paid. In some cases a previous request will be implied, as where the money was obtained by duress either of a person or property, or by deceit, or where there has been a subsequent express promise to repay the money, as was the ease in Stuht v. Sweesy, 48 Neb. 767, 67 N. W. 748. But where the payment is entirely voluntary — where there is no subsequent promise to repay — a previous request must be proved.”
In considering this same question, though presented by the pleadings, the supreme court of California, in Curtis v. Parks, 55 Cal. 106, said: “The complaint failing to show any agreement or understanding by which the plaintiffs were authorized to pay the defendant’s part, or any promise by the latter to repay, it fails to show any right in plaintiffs to recover what must be regarded, as the case is presented by the complaint, as a voluntary payment. No man can be a debtor for money paid, unless it was paid at his request.” The court properly refused this requested instruction.
: “(6) The question for your determination in this ease is as to whether the plaintiff company, at the time of the transfer ■of the two hundred shares of its capital stock from W. H. Donovan to Paul McCormick, trustee, paid what it did pay for the same because it had purchased said stock to be held as its own or like treasury stock, and to be disposed of as its board of directors should order, or whether the stock was purchased by the defendant, Sparr, and the other stockholders in the proportion of their then holdings, each being entitled to dispose of his own share as he saw fit, the plaintiff corporation paying for the same at the request of the purchasers and for their accommodation.
“ (7) The burden of proof is on the plaintiff to show that it did not buy or own the Donovan stock, and that when it paid for the same it was not paying its own obligation or indebtedness, but advanced the money as an accommodation to the defendant Power, McCormick, and Johnson, who were purchasers of the same; and the plaintiff must satisfy you by a preponderance of the evidence that it did not buy said stock, but simply advanced to the persons last named, at their request, the money to buy the same; and if you believe the weight of the evidence is against the contention of the plaintiff in that regard, or if you believe the evidence in respect to the matter to be evenly balanced, or if you are unable to say from the evidence what the truth of the matter is, your verdict should be for the defendant.”
In State v. Mason, 24 Mont. 340, 61 Pac. 861, this court, speaking through Mr. Justice "Word, quoted with approval, and specifically adopted, the rule announced in People v. Levison, 16 Cal. 98, 76 Am. Dec. 505, as follows: “It is true, there is no statement in this case. But, when the instructions are erroneous under any and every state of facts, then this court will review them. For it follows as necessarily in such a case that the court erred to the prejudice of the defendant, when
In 1 Blashfield on Instructions to Juries, section 375, it is said: “So, where the instructions would be correct under a possible state of facts, and the evidence is not all before the court, it will be presumed that the evidence was such as to justify the giving of the instructions. This presumption is rebutted, however, whére the record purports to contain all the evidence, or where it is apparent that the instructions would be improper under any possible state of the evidence under the pleadings.” In order, then, to reverse this judgment, we are required to say that these instructions given would have been erroneous under any possible state of facts appearing at the trial of the case.
• The argument of counsel for appellant is that these instructions introduced into the case an issue not raised by the pleadings, imposed upon the' plaintiff the burden of proving such issue, and required the plaintiff to prove a negative. To what extent, if any, instructions may properly be given with respect to matters not strictly within the issues made by the pleadings, need not be considered. We do not think any new issue was introduced by these instructions. Every reasonable presumption will be indulged in favor of the action of the trial court, and, in the absence of the evidence, it will be presumed that the instructions were warranted by the interpretation of the plead-' ings acted upon by the parties, and by the evidence in the ease, unless the contrary appears.
The complaint alleges that these fifty shares of stock were purchased for Sparr at his special instance and request, and that he agreed to pay for them. The question whether the shares were purchased for the plaintiff did not present a new issue, for, under his general denial, Sparr might have presented
In Wiedeman v. Hedges, 63 Neb. 103, 88 N. W. 170, it is said: “If suit is brought against A for goods alleged to have been sold him, it would seem that the facts necessary to be established under the petition, before a recovery could be had, could hardly be more directly controverted than by evidence establishing the fact that the contract was made with, and the goods sold to B, and all such testimony is admissible under a general denial.” So, likewise, in actions in replevin and conversion, it has been held by this court that, where the plaintiff alleges ownership in himself, the defendant under a general denial may show that he is the owner of the property, or that it belongs to a third person. (Staubach v. Rexford, 2 Mont. 565; Gallick v. Bordeaux, 22 Mont. 470, 56 Pac. 961; Kipp v. Silverman, 25 Mont. 296, 64 Pac. 884.) If, then, when A alleges ownership in himself, and, under a general denial, B may show that he is the owner of the property, the converse of this would certainly be equally true, namely, if A alleges that B is the owner, as in the case under consideration, then, under the general denial, B may show that in fact A is such owner. (Pomeroy’s Code Remedies, sec. 558.)
These instructions would seem to indicate that the trial court understood that the theory of the defendant was that the shares of stock had been purchased by the plaintiff for its own use and benefit, and not for Sparr’s account. And, if that was the position assumed by the defendant, the trial court might properly have said to the jury: “The plaintiff contends that the shares of stock were purchased for the defendant at his instance and request; the defendant contends that they were purchased for the use and benefit of the plaintiff, and not for him It is for you to determine from the evidence which, if either, of these contentions is correct” — and this is just what the court did do, in effect, by instruction No. 6. If the theory of the defendant was that the shares of stock were purchased by the plaintiff for its own use, then instructions Nos. 8, 10,
It is also argued that instruction No. 7 imposes upon the plaintiff the burden of proving a negative; that is, that the plaintiff did not purchase the shares of stock for its own use and benefit. While this manner of presenting a question in controversy to the jury is not to be commended, we cannot say, in the absence of the evidence, that the instruction is erroneous. Confessedly, the burden was upon the plaintiff to show that the shares of stock were purchased for Sparr, and that Sparr either requested that they be purchased for him, or, knowing that they had been purchased for his use, agreed to pay for them. (Smith v. Perham, above.) If instruction No. 7 does not impose upon the plaintiff any additional burden, it cannot complain. The contention of plaintiff was that the shares had been purchased for Sparr at his special instance and request, and that, when plaintiff paid for the shares, it was merely advancing the money for Sparr’s accommodation, and that Sparr agreed to repay the amount advanced on his account. The instruction told the jury that, if they believed the weight of the evidence was against the contention of the plaintiff, or if the evidence in respect of the matter was evenly balanced, or if they were unable to say from the evidence what the truth of the matter was, their verdict should be for the defendant — and that portion of it is certainly correct.
Furthermore, it must be presumed that the evidence showed one of two things, that the shares were purchased for Sparr or for the plaintiff, and plaintiff could prove its contention by showing that they were purchased for Sparr, or by showing that they were not purchased for itself; for, if there were but two alternatives presented, then proof of either disproved the other, and, if proving that the stock was purchased for the defendant was sufficient to show that it was not purchased for the plaintiff, then there is nothing in this record to indicate
It is said that instructions 9 and 14, given, are conflicting, and they appear to be so. No. 9 told the jury that the plaintiff must prove that the shares were purchased for Sparr at his request. No. 14 announces the rule that, where one person pays money for the use of another, the law raises an implied promise, on the part of the person for whom the money was paid, to repay the same. Instruction No. 9 correctly states the law as determined in Smith v. Perham, above, while No. 14 is erroneous, but in plaintiff’s favor, as it only imposed upon the plaintiff the burden of showing that it had paid for the stock for Sparr’s use and benefit, and relieved it of the burden of showing any request on Sparr’s part in the first instance, or promise to pay in the second. But the fact that these instructions are conflicting does not require a reversal of the judgment. In State v. Jones, 32 Mont. 442, 80 Pac. 1095, this court said: “It is not every ease of conflicting instructions which .warrants a reversal. If one instruction states the law, and another one in conflict with it is given, which is erroneous, but in the defendant’s, favor, he cannot complain of the erroneous instruction, or of the conflict between the two” — and numerous authorities are cited in support, of the rule. And there is reason for the rule. If the jury in this ease followed the directions of instruction No. 9, the plaintiff cannot complain, because that instruction correctly states the law. If, on the other hand, the jury followed instruction No. 14, the plaintiff cannot complain, for,
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.