88 P. 651 | Wyo. | 1907
This action was commenced by the defendants in error, a partnership (plaintiffs below), against the plaintiff in error, a corporation (defendant below), to recover upon an account for a bill of goods alleged to have been sold and delivered to the plaintiff in error upon its request. The case was tried .without the intervention of a jury and the
The petition had attached to and filed with it a printed and itemized bill, following which and on the same page is the order for the goods so itemized. The following endorsement in lead pencil appears on the margin of the itemized bill and order, viz.: “Ship Sept. I, 1902. Notify this firm two weeks before.” It is urged that the goods were shipped at the time stated in the notation; that they reached Frontier in due time; that plaintiff in error was notified by the express company by which they were shipped of their arrival; that plaintiff in error declined to take them out of the express company’s office until upon notification that they would be sold to pay express charges and demurrage, when it paid such charges and took the goods to its store, where they have remained, and that the defendants in error were notified that the goods were held subject to their order.
It is assigned as error, first, that the judgment is not sustained by sufficient evidence; second, that the judgment is contrary to law in that the court erred in admitting testimony at variance with the petition in this, that evidence was admitted to prove the performance of a condition precedent of which there was no plea; third, that the petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
These assignments of error are predicated upon plaintiff in error’s theory as to the-effect of the notation upon the margin of the order already set out and will be considered together.
The notice of the shipment contemplated to be given prior to the shipment must be considered and determined in connection with the situation of the parties. The plaintiffs were doing business at Iowa City, in the State of Iowa, while the defendant’s place of business and where the goods were to be shipped was in the extreme western part of this state. We think that proof of notice as usually understood by merchants in their business transactions was
“Date, April 11, 1902.
“Equitable Manufacturing Co., Iowa City, Iowa.
“Gentlemen : — Please deliver to us at your earliest convenience, f. o. b. transportation companies, the above assortment of goods. The Frontier Supply Co.
“P. O., Frontier; County, Uinta; State, Wyoming.
“Freight Station, Kemmerer; Express Office, Kemmerer.”
This order, the list of goods ordered, and the marginal notation were all on one sheet of paper, which was attached to the petition as an exhibit. No breach of the contract was alleged. The answer was a general denial and no evidence was offered by either party as to when the marginal note was endorsed. It is contended by defendants in error that the notation was for the convenience of the party. The rule is well settled that after judgment and on error the pleadings will be liberally construed. The goods were by the order to be delivered at the earliest convenience of the seller. If the ten days’ notice was a condition precedent or concurrent it should have been taken advantage of by answer or in the evidence.
The petition is under Section 3560, Revised Statutes. That section in part is as follows: “In an action, counterclaim or set-off founded upon an account or upon an instrument for the unconditional payment of money only, it will be sufficient for a party to set forth a copy of the account or instrument, and to state there is due him, on such account or instrument, from the adverse party, a specified sum which he claims with interest.” This section was construed by the Supreme Court of Ohio prior to its adoption in this state. In Cincinnati v. Cameron, 33 Ohio State, 336, it was said: “The petition is under Section 122 of the code, on an account, as has been stated, a copy of which is ‘attached. A petition may be so made, although there was a special contract, if it had been fully performed, or if the conditions or modifications had been sanctioned by
The judgment will be affirmed. Affirmed.