100 Ind. 237 | Ind. | 1884
The appellees sued the appellant for the price of a table-rake and attachments for a reaper. The complaint consisted of three paragraphs. The first averred
The appellant filed an answer of three paragraphs. The first was a general denial. The second averred that the appellees were not, but that Aultman, Miller & Co. wore, the real parties in interest. The third, as a partial answer to the cause of action stated in the third paragraph of the complaint, averred, in substance, that on the 1st day of July, 1881, Aultman, Miller & Co., who manufactured the rake and attachments mentioned in said paragraph, through the appellees, as their agents, sold the same to the appellant, and agreed to adjust the same to a reaper he then owned, so as to enable him to properly cut and save forty acres of wheat which the appellees knew were then growing upon his farm,, in consideration of which he promised to pay them $65 two-years from that time; that said Aultman, Miller & Co., though often requested, did not adjust said rake and attachments to said reaper, nor could they do so, nor could the appellant do so himself, or procure any one else to properly adjust the same, so as to properly cut and save his wheat, in consequence of which he was damaged $50. Wherefore, etc.
The appellant also filed a counter-claim, in which he averred, in addition to the facts alleged in the third paragraph of his
A demurrer was sustained to this pleading, and a reply was-filed to the second and third paragraphs of the answer. A trial was had, and a verdict in favor of the appellees for $40, with answers to interrogatories, was returned. A motion for a new trial, and a motion to tax the costs of the action to-the appellees, were overruled, and judgment was rendered upon the general verdict. These last rulings are assigned as error.
The demurrer to the counter-claim was, we think, properly sustained. The loss of the appellant’s wheat caused by the-voluntary use of a machine improperly adjusted must be borne by himself, as the consequences did not necessarily arise from a breach of the agreement to properly adjust the' rake and its attachments. The damages to be recovered must-be the natural and proximate consequences of the breach of the agreement. 2 Greenl. Ev., section 256; 1 Sedgw. Dam., p. 66; Loker v. Damon, 17 Pick. 284; Cline v. Myers, 64 Ind. 304; Prosser v. Jones, 41 Iowa, 674. In the case last cited, the defendant agreed to give the plaintiff $100 for a threshing machine and thresh his wheat at any time within four days after notice. This he failed to do, and the plaintiff whose wheat was unstacked, and who was unable to get another machine to thresh it, brought an action to recover for such injury as it afterwards sustained; and the expense of stacking it, but it was held that such damages were too remote to be recovered in an action for the breach of a contract. This case seems1 precisely in point, and announces, as we-
The motion for judgment upon the answers of the jury to the interrogatories proceeds upon the ground that they show that the appellees are not the real parties in interest. The facts found bearing upon this question are these: That Aultman, Miller & Co., of Akron, Ohio, manufactured the rake and attachments, and through the appellees, as agents at Goshen, Indiana, sold them to the appellant; that the same belonged to said company at the time of sale, and that the appellees have settled with said company and accounted for said property. These facts are the only facts found bearing upon this question, and they do not, as we think, show that Aultman, Miller & Co. are the real parties in interest, within the meaning of the statute requiring every action to be prosecuted in the name of such party. These facts show that this property at the time of sale belonged to Aultman, Miller & Co., and that the sale was made by said company through the appellees as agents, but it does not, therefore, follow that the appellees may not maintain an action in their own name for the price. If the appellees were answerable to Aultman, Miller & Co. for the price of the articles, and the fact that they had accounted for them would seem to imply such liability, they were entitled to maintain an action in their own names for the price. Story Agency, section 398. The facts found are not inconsistent with such liability, and, therefore, can not control the general verdict. The motion was properly overruled.
It is next insisted that the court erred in overruling the appellant’s motion to tax the costs of the action to the appellees, because they recovered less than $50. That portion of section 591 of the statutes of 1881, applicable to this question provides that, “ In actions for money demands on contract commenced in the circuit or superior courts, if the
This disposes of all the questions in the record, and as we are of opinion that no error was committed, the judgment .should be_affirmed.
Per Curiam. — The judgment of the court below is affirmed, at the costs of the appellant.