27 S.E. 33 | N.C. | 1897
The pleadings in this case are complaint, answer, and counterclaim, amended answer and amended complaint. The issues are these: 1. Was the plaintiff the owner of the timber described in the complaint? Answered by the jury, "Yes." 2. Did the defendant contract with the plaintiff to cut, remove, and sell the timber, as alleged in the complaint? "Yes." 3. Did the defendant cut or remove and sell 101,291 feet of said timber at the price of $5.50 per thousand feet? "Yes." 4. Did the defendant fail to account for and pay over to plaintiff the proceeds of said sale of timber, after deducting the sum of $2.50 per 1,000 feet, as alleged in the complaint? "Yes." 5. Did the defendant wrongfully take, detain, and convert said timber, or the proceeds of the same? "Yes." 6. Did the plaintiff contract with the defendant that the defendant should cut and deliver 500,000 feet of cypress timber for the plaintiff? "Yes." 7. Did the plaintiff wrongfully (71) prevent the defendant from cutting and delivering said 500,000 feet of cypress timber? "No." 8. If so, what damages, if any, has the defendant sustained?
This action is brought to recover $329.66, the net balance due plaintiff on a contract to cut cypress timber trees and sell the same, which contract required the defendant to make return of account of sale and remit balance of proceeds to the plaintiff. The plaintiff alleges that the defendant refused to pay said account, and this is admitted. Plaintiff also *48 alleges that defendant's refusal is a breach of the fiduciary relation and confidence between them by reason of his agency. This is denied. Defendant in his answer avers that at the same time he had a parol agreement with the plaintiff to cut 500,000 feet of cypress timber on agreed terms, and that he was stopped from so doing by plaintiff, after some expenditures, and was damaged $1,000, and alleges this as a counterclaim, and offers this as his excuse for refusing to pay the net balance aforesaid. In his amended answer he denies several of the allegations admitted in his original answer to be true. The case was tried upon the admissions in the pleadings and the evidence of the parties, and the jury found all the issues in favor of the plaintiff.
Pending the action, the plaintiff obtained an order of arrest against defendant, as he was authorized to do under Code, 291 (2), and so held in Boykin v. Maddrey,
The 4th exception must be overruled, for the reason that the question was subsequently answered by the defendant, when he said, "I deposited the money with Harrell by advice of counsel, to hold until litigation ended."
The 7th exception was to the charge that if the jury believed the evidence they should answer the second, third, and fourth issues "Yes." The original answer admits those facts to be true, but they are denied in the amended answer, and we find nothing in the evidence of the defendant or other witness denying the facts found by the jury on those issues. Exception overruled.
The ninth exception was to this part of the charge: "A conversion consists either in the appropriation of a thing to a party's own use and beneficial enjoyment, or in its destruction, or in exercising dominion over it in exclusion or defiance of the plaintiff's rights, or in withholding the possession from the plaintiff under a claim of title inconsistent with his own. If a person entrusted with another's goods places them in the hands of a third person, contrary to orders, it is conversion." The exception fails to point the error, and we see nothing in the charge prejudicial to the defendant. The exception must be overruled.
The third exception is overruled, but it requires more attention. The direct point presented, so far as we can find, has not been before decided or discussed by this court. The plaintiff's complaint contains ten distinct and numbered allegations. The first section of the answer to the *49
complaint says: "That sections 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 are admitted." During the trial the plaintiff offered in evidence paragraph 1 of the original answer of the defendant, which appears from the answer in the record. The defendant objected to the introduction of the said paragraph unless the whole answer was put in. Objection overruled. Formerly, (73) in courts of law and equity, the several parts of the allegations and answers were usually interlinked and explanatory of each other, so that the just rule was to introduce the whole allegation or answer. 1 Taylor on Evidence, sec. 660 and 663. An admission in a former trial of the same matter may be read in evidence in a later trial. Grant v.Gooch,
In Adams v. Utley,
In McDonald v. McDonald,
In Bompart v. Lucas,
We are of opinion that the plaintiff, upon the facts, had a right to introduce the admissions in the first five allegations of the answer, without *50 the others. The allegations 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5, admitted, and the remaining ones do not blend, or explain the other, but constitute distinct issues for the jury.
The defendant deposited the money with Harrell, to whom he was indebted over $300, and refused to account, and set up a counterclaim. He insists that he did so in good faith and ought not to be held to have committed any breach of trust. Unfortunately, he had no cause for a counterclaim, and the intent with which a breach of trust is committed is immaterial, as explained in Boykin v. Maddrey,
Affirmed.