20 Or. 328 | Or. | 1891
— 1. We have lately considered what constituted a stated account in two cases, and a reference to them seems to be all that is necessary at this time. In Holmes v. Page, 19 Or. 232, we held that an account stated is an account which has been rendered by the creditor and has been assented to by the debtor as correct either expressly or by implication of law, from failure to object, and that the action was not founded upon the items of the account but on the defendant’s consent to the balance stated. And Truman v. Owens, 17 Or. 523, is to the same effect. Under the issues in this case the only question to be tried was whether or not the account between the plaintiffs and defendants became a stated account. This question was concisely stated in appellants’ fourth and fifth instructions refused by the court. If the plaintiffs delivered an account to the defendants either personally or by mail, it would become a stated account, if not objected to within a reasonable time; and in an action on such account, it cannot be opened only for fraud, error or mistake; and the answer in such action must set forth fully the fraud, error or mistake relied upon. {Kronenherger v. Binz, 56 Mo. 121; Terry v. Sickles, 13 Cal. 427; Young v. Hill, 67 N. Y. 162, 23 Am. Rep. 99.)
2. But it was suggested that an account rendered, which had at the bottom thereof the usual initials, “E. & O. E.”— errors and omissions excepted — could not become a stated account; that is, it would remain open and unsettled, so that either party would be at liberty to contest any item thereof, though if these words had been omitted the account would
The court erred in giving said instructions four, ten and eleven, and in failing to give those asked by the plaintiffs. Let the judgment be reversed and the cause remanded to the court below for a new trial.