15 Kan. 236 | Kan. | 1875
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Probably the most difficult question in the case is, whether the court below abused its discretion by allowing said reply to be filed as it did, and then immediately proceeding with the trial of the cause. The plaintiff was apparently guilty of gross ladies in not filing his reply sooner. He,had then been for more than four months in default for want of a reply; and he did not even then ask to file his reply until after the'jury had been impanneled and sworn to try the cause. And the court then allowed him to file the reply without the slightest showing of diligence, without the slightest showing that his reply was true, or that the defense which the reply put in issue was not true, and without the slightest terms of any kind whatever being imposed upon him. Some terms ought evidently to have been imposed upon him as a condition upon which he might file the reply — a verification by affidavit of the truth of the reply, a postponement of the trial, a continuance of the ease, or a payment of the costs of the term, or some portion thereof. But still we cannot say that the court below so abused its discretion that we must reverse the judgment on that account; It is true, the defendant said (not under oath, not by affidavit,) that “he was not ready to proceed then to
It seems hardly necessary for us to say that the contract between Grant, Cooper and Pendery is not void as coming within the statute of frauds. (Gen. Stat. 505, ch. 43, § 6.) Grant did not merely agree to pay the debt of Cooper, but he agreed to pay Ms own debt to Pendery. But it is claimed that the verdict of the iury does not show any consent on the part of Cooper to the payment by Grant to Pendery. Now the fifth finding of the jury states among other things that, “The said defendant Grant agreed with said Cooper to take fifty of said mills,” etc., “ and agreed to pay the proceeds, amounting to the sum of $750, to the plaintiff Pendery,” etc. How could there be an agreement between Grant and Cooper, that Grant should pay Pendery $750 without Cooper consenting to it? The contract was in fact .made between Grant, Cooper and Pendery. All participated in it, and all agreed to it. And Pendery, on the very day that the contract was made, gave Cooper the credit on the note. Grant not only agreed with and promised Cooper to pay Pendery, but he also agreed with
It is claimed that the tender of said mills was not sufficient. A portion of them were duly tendered, and Grant, without any sufficient reason, refused to accept or receive them, or any of the mills sold to him, and then - , they were ail stored m a sate and convenient place for the benefit of Grant, and subject to his order, and he was duly notified thereof. This was sufficient. The refusal of Grant to accept said mills excused the formal tender and delivery of those not formally tendered.
The defendant offered in evidence the deposition of a certain witness; the plaintiff objected; the court overruled the objection. The defendant then read in evidence the examination-in-chief of said witness, and refused to read the cross-examination. The plaintiff then moved the court to strike out that portion of the deposition that had been read, unless the defendant would offer and read in evidence the balance of the deposition. The defendant still refusing to read the balance of said deposition, the court struck out what had been read, and instructed the jury not to consider the same. We see no error in this.
The 7th, 8th, and 10th instructions which the defendant asked to have given to the jury, and which the court refused, are not applicable to the facts of this case. (Jardicke v. Serafford, ante, 120.)
The 17th instruction which the defendant asked to have given to the jury, and which the court refused, was properly refused. It was with regard to a notice served by Cooper upon Grant. The notice was made out in duplicate, and one copy was served on Grant, and the other was' retained by Pendery. Pendery’s copy was intro
The judgment of the court below is affirmed.