9 Neb. 130 | Neb. | 1879
The plaintiff in error brought his suit in the court below upon four causes of action, and recovered ujton the last two. Upon the first two there was a verdict and judgment against him, which, because of certain alleged errors, he has brought to this court by petition in error for review.
Of the several errors alleged, the only ones that are in a situation to be examined are those which question the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict. Those relating to the admission and the.rejection of testimony were not properly brought to the attention of the district court in the motion for a new trial, and therefore cannot be considered here.
As constituting the first cause of action, a breach of warranty is alleged in the sale of a “ Werner harvester ” to the plaintiff by one William McCaig, the agent of the defendants. The second cause of action is a claim for certain services, rendered by one Painter, as clerk and book-keeper under said McCaig in the business of his agency, which claim had been assigned to the plaintiff. . The defendants in .error were members of what is known as “ The Nebraska State G-range of the Patrons of Husbandry.” The action is sought to be maintained against them on the theory that by being members thereof, and unincorporated, they were in legal contemplation partners in whatever business the organization saw fit to engage in. That this would be so as to strangers dealing with this agent without knowledge of the true character and purposes of the association may be true, but is it true as to one in the situation of the plaintiff?
In the creation of this state agency, and in all they did in connection therewith, the defendants, doubtless, acted in the utmost good faith, and with the sole view of benefiting their constituents, of which the plaintiff was one, he being at the time a member of a subordinate “ grange.” Under these circumstances it seems to us that the plaintiff is not in a situation to complain of the defendant’s conduct; and that, even if he have a cause of action against anybody for defects in the harvester in question, it is most certainly not against those whose scheme he availed himself of, and through whose efforts in his behalf he sought to profit.
And these considerations are applicable as well to the'second cause of action also, which in the hands of the plaintiff is subject to any defense that could have been made to it in a suit brought thereon by the assignor. This man Painter, by whom the services which form the basis of the claim were rendered, was an active member of the order, served on various committees of the “ State Grange,” and was thoroughly conversant with all its workings. He certainly had no reason to, nor could he have, supposed that the defendants were personally liable to him therefor.
In addition to what we have already said there is still another sufficient reason why the verdict of the jury upon the first cause of action should not be disturbed. The harvester in question, as the evidence
Judgment aeeirmed.