2 Wyo. 94 | Wyo. | 1879
The claim set up in the petition brought by the plaintiff below, the defendant here, was admitted upon the trial in the district court; and the only issue there tried was raised by the answer, which alleged as a counterclaim, that the Company was indebted to Fillmore in $3,783.60, for 16,816 railroad cross-ties, sold and delivered by him to it, on or about May 1, 1872, at 22£ cents a tie, and the reply which denied the sale. The issue gave to him the opening and closing of the proofs. The Company admitted that it purchased the ties at the time, but claimed that they belonged to E. W. Bennett, and that it purchased them from him through M. C. Brown as his attorney; and introduced evidence to sustain this theory. Sundry exceptions were taken for incompetency and irrelevancy to the admission, on the part of the Company, of evidence which tended, and as tending in part to show that the purchase was so made, and that, when made, the ties were Bennett’s.
It was mutually conceded that there was but one lot of ties — the 16,816, but one sale of them to the Company, and that the sale was made either by Bennett or Fillmore; which of the two sold was the principal question; if the Company bought of Bennett, it could not have bought of Fillmore; proving that it purchased of one, disproved that it purchased of the other; so that evidence tending to show that it bought of the former, went directly in support of the general denial, interposed to the counter-claim: evidence that it bought from him through Brown as his agent, explained the transaction; also went in contradiction of the testimony of Brown, who had previously sworn for Fillmore, that he, the latter, made the sale through himself as agent; evidence that, when the Company bought, the ties belonged to Bennett, gave consistency to its theory of
Bennett, a witness- for the Company, admitted on cross-examination that he had given to the Company a bond of indemnity against the payment to him of the price, so that he was the real defendant; on his re-examination he produced the bond, and it was put in evidence against an objecttion for irrelevancy. Fillmore had called out the fact that such bond had been given, and certainly could not complain of the production of the instrument which confirmed the fact which he had sought to establish. Exceptions were taken for incompetency and irrelevancy to the admission, on the part of the company, of evidence that it paid Bennett for the ties; the evidence was objectionable, because it had no tendency to support the general denial; like exceptions were taken to the admission, on the part of the Company, of evidence to show that Bennett, having authorized the payment to Fillmore of the price stipulated in what was claimed to be the Bennett sale to' the Company, revoked the authority;- and the evidence was in like manner objectionable. Exceptions for incompetency were taken to the 18th interrogatory and its answer, contained in the deposition of Clark, a witness for the Company; the question was whether the ties were purchased by the Company of Fillmore, and was answered that they were not; the question was objectionable, because it permitted the witness to state the very conclusion of fact involved in. the issue ; he had, however, previously testified 'that he purchased the ties through Brown with the -understanding that the latter was Bennett’s agent for the sale of them, and that they then belonged to Bennett, showing that the answer was a mere mental conclusion, based upon facts which he had already and properly testified to; a like exception was taken to the allowance of a question to Bennett, a witness for the
It was conceded by Fillmore that, if he made the sale, he made it upon a title derived from Bennett shortly before he sold. His only witnesses were himself and M. C. Brown. The substance of their evidence on the subject of title is,— that Brown was the agent of Fillmore in respect to the ties, and, as such, sold them to the Company on or about May 1, 1872, at 22^ cents apiece, or at a gross of $3,783.60; was at the same time, and before and afterwards Bennett’s agent respecting the ties, and, as such, sold them to Fillmore at 18 cents apiece, or at a gross of $3,026.88; that the sale to Fillmore was made about two days before that to the Company was made; and that the negotiations for this last mentioned sale continued from two to three days; also that Bennett was n'ot present at either of these sales. There is no evidence that Bennett knew of either of these alleged sales or of their negotiations, till after they had been made; had he learned of them, while in progress, from Fillmore or-Brown, Fillmore could have shown it upon the trial, ’ and it was his right and for his interest to have done so; he offered no proof upon the subject, and it must be assumed that Bennett learned nothing from them of the matter, while it was proceeding; that this ignorance on Bennett’s part
It is upon this transaction that Fillmore claims to have derived the title, on which he bases his alleged sale to the Company. What does the transaction import ? It imports that the alleged sales to and by Fillmore were one transaction, and that Brown, in conducting them, was acting in the double capacity of agent for and against Bennett.
This, as matter of law, vitiated the sale to Fillmore, if there was one. It further imports, by the facts of its oneness, of Brown’s so acting as agent, the proximity of the sales, the large difference between the prices, and the second being for an improved price; that, when selling for Bennett, Brown knew of the opportunity of obtaining the advanced price from the Company — that he knew of it by conducting the negotiation with the Company for the price, that the sale to Fillmore, or to the company by way of Fillmore, was intended to give to the latter the benefit of the advance, and the sale to him was to take effect, or to stand, in case a sale to the Company should be effected; in short, that he was selling for Bennett against his interest, and in the interest of his vendee. This, as matter of fact, vitiated the alleged sale to Fillmore.
Thus in either of its views the transaction established the fact that the sale to Fillmore was void as to Bennett, and left his title unaffected. Is it proper to predicate the term, “established,” of this evidence furnished by Fillmore’s witnesses? Had the evidence been introduced through other witnesses by the Company for the purpose of impeaching his title, and contradictory evidence been introduced by him, the jury alone could have deduced the result; but there was no contradiction on the subject; his witnesses supplied the entire evidence upon it, and in part for the purpose of showing title in himself from Bennett, and so sustaining his theory that he sold the ties to the Company, and all in that connection. It was direct,"strong and clear, and had
Let us next ascertain how the question, as to who was that vendor, stood at the close of the testimony. It was mutually admitted that Brown acted as agent for the vendor, and Clark as agent for the vendee. It was not denied, and was virtually admitted by Fillmore that the following documents, relating to the ties, were exchanged in the course of the only sale, and the very sale, that was made to the Company, and were genuine and correct. These were the documents:
LETTER FROM FILLMORE TO CLARK.
Labahje, April 17, 1872.
S. H. H. Clark, Esq., A. G. Supt.: —
Dear Sir — Mr. Brown of this place, attorney for Bennett, offers to sell the Bennett ties, lying at Port Steele, for 35 cents apiece, and give the Railroad Company ample security to defend any claim made by Davis and associates on the same, which I ana positive he can do, for the reason that Davis and associates never had any legal claim upon them, they having been made by Bennett without having any contract whatever with Davis and associates. As regards the Bennett ties, they are much better than the ties at Laramie and Wyoming will average. There is about 16,000 of the Bennett ties, to which I refer.
Yours truly,
L. FILLMORE.
*104 TELEGRAM FROM BROWN TO CLARK.
Laramie, April 30, 1872.
S. H. H. C.
Will sell at 22J, if you will move ties at once. All can be saved, if you will use energy and promptness. Answer.
M. C. BROWN.
LETTER FROM BROWN TO BENNETT.
Laramie, May 20, 1872.
E. W. Bennett, Esq., Port Steele.
Dear Sir — Your letter received. You do not say whether voucher shall issue to Fillmore or .not. Clark thought it should be so issued, but desired you to say that you are satisfied with that arrangement. Of course Company wont pay for 30 or 40 days, but will issue voucher at once for them. Are altogether 16,800 ties. Mr. Fillmore proposes to pay you for that number, if Clark will issue voucher for that number.
M. C. BROWN.
LETTER FROM BENNETT TO BROWN,
Fort Steele, Wyo. Tee., May 22, 1872.
M. C. Brown, Laramie City.
Yours of the 20th inst. is at hand. The voucher can issue to Fillmore, of course. That is the understanding I had with Clark at Rawlings. I do not know anything about Fillmore, but suppose it is all O. K. If you say that it is all right, I am perfectly satisfied: but, as I wrote you, I want the money as soon as possible. Please write me,'when I can expect to get it. I shall look to you to settle with me.
Yours truly,
E. W. BENNETT.
*105 LETTER. FROM CLARK TO BROWN.
Omaha, (Neb.) May 27, 1872.
M. C. Brown, Esq., Attorney, etc.
Dear Sir — Yours of the 23d inst. duly received. The voucher for Bennett ties has been audited, and will be paid, when called for. Same was made in favor of L. Fillmore, Esq., as per yours and Bennett’s instructions.
Yours truly,
S. H. H. CLARK.
Of these documents some precede and lead to and the rest succeed and rest upon the contract of sale. By the first Fillmore calls the Co’s, attention to the ties as Bennett’s ties for sale by Brown as Bennett’s attorney, and all the documents upon their face framed upon the idea, and admit of no other idea, than that, and so virtually declare that the sale was by Bennett, through Brown as his agent, to the ■ Co.; though they do not indicate that it was written, they point altogether to that as the central fact. Piad these documents appeared in proof in the first instance, accompanied by these admissions, it would have been incompetent for Fillmore to have introduced parol evidence to show that he, not Bennett, was the vendor; he would have been estopped by the rule that written cannot be contradicted by parol testimony. But, further, on the 15th day of May, 1872, the contract .was reduced to writing, executed and delivered to the Co., by Brown as agent for Bennett, and,'in so doing, Brown was acting in concurrence with, and at the instance of Fillmore, for such is the clear import of his evidence as Fillmore’s witness. The instrument is as follows:
CONTRACT OF SALE BY BENNETT TO THE CO.
' Sold to S. H. H. Clark, Assist. Supt. ü. P. R. R. for*106 the Co., what is known as the Bennett ties at Fort Fred Steele — 16,832 ties — as reported by Mr. Shankland, Division Superintendent, at 22J, 18,787.20. Please issue voucher to Mr. L. Fillmore for above amount.
E. W. BENNETT.
By M. C. Be OWN, his Attorney.
Labamie Citt, W. T., May 15, 1872.
According to the above stated principle, and by the no less rigid principle, that a written contract cannot be varied by parol, Fillmore would have been estopped from intro-dueing the evidence. The real evidence was introduced before these documents appeared in the case; the'force of the principle is the same; they controlled, and, virtually struck out that evidence. Here it is to be observed that these instruments were introduced by the Company, and in the rebuttal no evidence was made to impeach them. Thus at the close of the evidence it had become an established fact in the case that the sale to the Company was made by Bennett, and therefore not by Fillmore. As the fact was no longer open to dispute by him, it had ceased to be a question, and was not open to the'jury; the jury is neither needed, nor can be allowed or asked to enquire as to the existence of an ascertained fact.
Testimony was introduced by Fillmore to show that Bennett ratified the alleged sale to him. Assuming • that Bennett ratified, that did not tend to show that he did not, and that Fillmore did, sell to the Company; nor did it change the status of the Company, as Bennett’s vendee, making it Fillmore’s vendee; its only effect was to transfer to Fillmore a right to the price due by the sale from the Company to Bennett; and therefore to establish in Fillmore against the Company, a claim essentially different from that which is alleged in his defense. The testimony intended to show the ratification, was therefore incompetent for the purpose. Here it will be instructive to observe
Clark testifies that he negotiated with Brown as the agent of Bennett, and understanding that he was such agent, and had no knowledge of any connection of Fillmore with the ties in respect to the purchase by the Company from Bennett, except what is contained in Fillmore’s letter of April 17, 1872, nor had any connection with him in the matter, except by that letter and his reply to it of April 22, 1872. The letter of April 17 contains no indication that Fillmore had, or was to have any interest in the ties, or in the disposition of them, and no inference can be drawn that Clark’s answer contained any: the documentary evidence verifies this statement. In his evidence, given in the opening, as a witness for Fillmore, Brown testifies that he was Bennett’s agent for the sale of the ties, as such sold them to Fillmore, and forthwith resold them, as Fillmore’s agent, to the Company: — evidence, which in the absence of the documents, does not indicate whether in the resale he did or did not disclose to the Company the alleged agency for Fillmore, and is equally consistent with either supposition; in the light, however, of the documents it would be false if intended to mean that this agency was, and true if intended to mean that it was not disclosed; upon the duty of the court to reconcile the different parts of the testimony— even a given part in the abstract, equally bears diverse interpretation — this part of Brown’s evidence must be taken to mean, that upon the supposed resale he did not disclose his agency for Fillmore.
In the rebuttal Brown again testifies, but does not question the above quoted evidence of Clark, which had in the meantime been given; this silence is acquiescence, and verifies Clark’s statement, that, during the negotiations of the sale, he had no knowledge of Fillmore as a party to it. If I have correctly interpreted the evidence adduced by Fillmore as to the agency of Brown in transferring to and
We come now to the requests to charge, and the charge. It was the right of the plaintiff below, that the jury should be instructed to return a verdict for the amount claimed in the petition. Therefore every rejected request made by the defendant below, proposed a false issue to the jury, and was properly rejected. The requests on the part of the plaintiff below, the allowance of which was excepted to, also proposed false issues to the jury, and were therefore erroneous, but because they asked for less than that party was entitled to, the other side cannot complain; the charge was erroneous because it did not direct a verdict for the Company, as above explained, but submitted to the jury for ascertainment, a matter already ascertained. Fillmore may not complain of the charge for two reasons — one, that the case was put to the jury less favorably for the Company, and more favorably for himself than it should have been, and he has suffered nothing by it; the other, that the exception to the charge is to it as a whole, not specifying any particular part or parts as objected to, or the ground or grounds of objection. As the verdict is what it should have been, though erroneously reached, it must stand, and the judgment below affirmed, with costs.
Judgment affirmed.