37 Mich. 598 | Mich. | 1877
November, 1871, Fish was engaged in buying wheat at his warehouse in Kalamazoo and in
Adams then charged for the whole quantity he claimed to have delivered and sued for it before a justice. The case was appealed and he recovered in the circuit court. Fish alleged error.
Adams was sworn in his own behalf and testified he could “pretty nearly recollect the amount he delivered to defendant independent of the memorandum he made at the time, except the odd pounds; that he made a memorandum of it at the time he drew it.”
His counsel then asked him to look at his memorandum and tell when and in what quantities he drew the wheat to Fish if he could, and he replied: I sold and delivered wheat to defendant — 571 bushels at $1.23 and 105 bushels at ,$1.40 and delivered it as follows: giving seven separate items, one of which was 105 bushels and 43 pounds at $1.40 per bushel delivered November 13, 1871. He further testified that they kept an account of the wheat as delivered at the warehouse by means of slips of paper tacked on the spout of the hopper and that after delivery of the last load the whole quantity was figured up; one Edmunds, Fish’s warehouse clerk, calling off amounts from the slips of paper and he, Adams, taking them down again on the page opposite to that on which he had previously entered them as the delivery proceeded and that he and Edmunds then compared the two series of entries and found they agreed and that Edmunds then gave him a receipt for the amount. The receipt was produced and admitted. It read as follows:
“George W. Fish’s Warehouse, Kalamazoo, Michigan, Nov. 16, 1871.
Delivered by H. Dale Adams five hundred and seventy-one and 44-100 bu. white, one hundred and five and 43-100 white amber.
574-44 white $1.23.
105-43 white $1.40.
C. buyers.”
G. W. Fish.
The two series of entries were successively offered in evidence on the part of Adams and admitted against objection. The objection to the first was that it was hearsay and the mere act of the party; to the second the same, and also that it was not made until after the transaction.
• The court did not err. The entries were admissible to the jury in connection with the other evidence of Adams. 'The testimony he gave if believed tended to show that these entries amounted to a sort of contemporaneous record, to the correctness of which the parties at the time mutually assented. Such being the case they were proper to be considered with other facts as evidence of a contemporaneous admission on the part of Fish of his reception of the •quantity Adams claimed to have delivered Meyer v. Reichardt, 112 Mass., 108. The two series were so connected •by the facts as to be fairly admissible together. Moreover •the last as well as the first was part of the transaction. It was one of its incidents and made at the time of completing delivery and not on a separate occasion. The credit due to the testimony and its convincing value were for the jury. It is quite unnecessary to inquire whether the admission might not be sustained on other grounds.
It having appeared that the parties differed about this
Compliance would have been gross error. The concession made by 'counsel was not fairly capable of the construction given to it by the request.
He could not have intended a plain surrender of his client’s claim. He was willing to admit that recovery was only sought for the amount of the one item and not for others about which there had been no dispute and which had been paid for. He did not mean that the money which had been paid and received on admitted items should be forced to apply on one Fish claimed he had never received, and which both parties in fact admitted had not been paid for. The transaction was required to be unraveled, not to allow recovery for the other items or to recall the appropriation of past payments and give them a new application, but to settle the rights of the parties in regard to the unpaid disputed item.
The court properly construed the proceedings. The charge that the court erred in refusing to grant a new trial presents no question.
No error being shown the judgment must be affirmed with costs.