This is an action at law to recover the value of shoes sold by the plaintiff to the defendants. The case was tried by the court and a jury, and a verdict was rendered for the plaintiff in the sum of $2,455.07. From the judgment entered on this verdict, the defendants have taken this appeal.
At the trial it was agreed that the amount due the plaintiff for shoes sold and delivered was $3,495.07, but the defendants set up a counterclaim for damages based on an agreement with the plaintiff to constitute the defendants the sole agents for selling the WalkOver shoes in Plainfield, N. J., and the failure of the plaintiff to sell and deliver shoes to the defendants as required by the defendants to complete their stock of Walk-Over shoes. The jury allowed the amount of the plaintiff’s claim as agreed upon at the trial, $3,495.07, anfi allowed the defendants as damages on their counterclaim $1,040, leaving the amount due the plaintiff $2,455.07. The court is asked to reverse the judgment entered against the defendants on the verdict on the grounds, “1. That the verdict is against the weight of the evidence.” And “2. That the jury having found that the contract sued on and counter-claimed against has been breached by the plaintiff, the appellants were entitled to the entire proven damages on their counter-claim.”
There is no complaint of commission of any error of law in the trial of the case. The complaint is that the jury did not render its verdict in accordance with the evidence. The burden was on the defendants to establish by the weight of .the evidence that the plaintiff broke its contract to sell and deliver shoes to the defendants, and, secondly, the amount of damages resulting to the defendants therefrom. The credibility of the witnesses, the inferences to be drawn from the testimony, and the weight to be given to the evidence, were purely questions of fact for the jury, and their verdict, based upon competent evidence cannot now be disturbed by this appellate court. New York Cent. & H. R. R. Co. v. De Maluta Fraloff,
For the reasons stated above, the verdict of the jury cannot now be disturbed, and the judgment entered thereon is affirmed.
