34 Minn. 301 | Minn. | 1885
This is an action to recover pay for engineering services rendered by plaintiff and his minor son to defendant, and for money expended by plaintiff for defendant in connection therewith. That defendant is a railroad corporation, and that the services sued for were performed upon a line or route within the scope of its articles of incorp oration, is undisputed. It is also undisputed that Tranah was one of the defendant’s chief engineers, and as such employed by defendant “to survey and establish” the line of its road. It was also shown, without contradiction, that a “chief engineer is the superintendent of everything connected with the location and construction of the road.” There was also competent evidence tending to show that, assuming to act as such chief engineer, Tranah employed plaintiff to perform and procure to be performed the services, and to make the expenditures sued for. That Tranah did thus in fact employ the plaintiff was not disputed in evidence, but the defendant insisted, and introduced what was equivalent to evidence tending to show, that Tranah and a partner took of defendant a contract “to survey and establish” the line of defendant’s road, and “supervise the construction thereof,” at the price of $1,000 per mile; themselves paying, as we understand it, the expenses of so doing; and that they had no authority to make any contract by which defendant would be bound to pay any part of such expenses.
Now, upon the foregoing state of the evidence, admissions, and undisputed facts in the case, and upon the further evidence as to the performance of the services and the making of the expenditures sued
These conclusions appear to us to dispose of the case; for, in view of the admitted and undisputed facts above mentioned, the many exceptions taken to the testimony as to who the defendant’s directors were,' and what they said and did, become unimportant. Tranah’s apparent agency is made out without any dependence upon that testimony, and by defendant’s own admission. If there was any error in receiving that testimony, it cannot have substantially prejudiced the defendant.
As there is nothing further in the case which appears to us to demand special consideration here, the order denying a new trial is affirmed.