56 Neb. 631 | Neb. | 1898
John W. Edwards brought this action to recover a balance claimed to be due him on certain real estate sold to the defendant. A jury trial resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff for $603.13, for which sum judgment was rendered against the defendant. It is undisputed that plaintiff, a resident of the state erf Illinois, sol'd to the de
. Error is predicated upon the giving of certain instructions. The fourth reads as follows: “It .appears from,
Objection is made to the fifth instruction, which declares: “The question at isisue in this case is, for whom was the Capital National Bank acting in the transaction between the plaintiff and defendant; and, if the bank wais acting for the plaintiff, then, did the defendant, in paying in the $500 to the bank, pay the same unreservedly so far as he, the defendant, was concerned?” This was an appropriate direction to the jury. There was evidence
The sixth instruction reads thus: “If you find from the evidence that the plaintiff authorized the Capital National Bank to receive the money for him from the defendant, and sent the deed to the land purchased to be delivered to defendant upon payment of the purchase price, then the bank will be authorized to receive the money from the defendant for the plaintiff, and an unreserved payment by the defendant to the bank of the money in question would be a payment to the plaintiff.” The .foregoing iis assailed for the use of the word “unreserved,” it being argued that payment to the bank was payment to the plaintiff, although the money was received by the bank upon condition or conditions imposed by the defendant. To this proposition we do not agree. If (the payment of this money.to the bank wais conditional, then plaintiff was not bound thereby, so long as the conditions had not been complied with, notwithstanding the bank was authorized by plaintiff to receive the consideration for the land, since until the defendant released all interest in the money, and the plaintiff had the right to demand the same from the bank, there was in law no payment to Edwards. The bank had no right to bind him by accepting a conditional payment. The instruction was not faulty in the particular suggested.
We have examined the rulings of the court on the admission of testimony, and find no error therein prejudicial to the rightis of the defendant. It wo-uld. serve no useful purpose -to set out in this opinion the rulings complained of, or to -state at 'length our reason for sustaining them.
It is finally argued that the verdict and judgment were for too large a sum, since the jury allowed the amount of exchange charged by the bank on the money remitted Edwards, also interest on the f500 from the date- of the contract. It is asserted that interest should have been computed only from the date plaintiff perfected his title. Whether the verdict was excessive -o-r not was not called to the attention of the trial court in the motion for a new trial, -and therefore cannot be reviewed at this time. Error in the assessment of the amount due -cannot be considered under an assignment in a motion for a new trial that the verdict is not sustained by sufficient evidence. (Riverside Coal Co. v. Holmes, 36 Neb. 858.) Moreover, there is no -assignment in the petition in error relating to the amount of recovery. This- alone-is fatal upon that point. (Oliver v. Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co., 40 Neb. 845; Beavers v. Missouri. P. R. Co. 47 Neb. 761; Barmby v. Wolfe, 44 Neb. 77; Montgomery v. Albion Nat. Bank, 50 Neb. 652.) The judgment is
Affirmed.