115 P. 141 | Or. | 1911
delivered the opinion of the court.
From an examination of the answer it appears defendant denies the allegations of the complaint, “except as hereinafter expressly alleged,” thereafter alleging, as to each cause of action, that all insurance written by plaintiff in the St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Company for defendant, or at his instance and request, during June and July, 1907, was written by plaintiff as presi
As we understand the record, the court allowed the motion to strike out all evidence relating to the custom of the underwriter to look to the broker bringing business into the office, for the payment of premiums on business so introduced, for the reason that the plaintiff had not pleaded such custom.
“A custom, within the meaning of the law, if general, is incorporated into and becomes a part of every contract to which it is applicable; if local, of every contract made by parties having knowledge of or bound to know its existence.”
In our opinion this evidence is admissible to prove the circumstance of the alleged contract, and to explain what was expressed in a general way perhaps, in order to determine the understanding between the parties at the time of making the arrangement, upon what, if anything, their minds met, or what their agreement was: McCulsky v. Klosterman, 20 Or. 108 (25 Pac. 366: 10 L. R. A. 785); Holmes v. Whitaker, 23 Or. 319, 323 (31 Pac. 705).
In Hewitt v. Week Lumber Co., 77 Wis. 548 (46 N. W. 822), where the jury found it was, and had been for many years, a general custom in the sawmills on the Wisconsin River for the manufacturer to keep the slabs from manufactured logs, it was held that the custom was a general one, within the meaning of the law, and therefore could be proved without an allegation thereof. “The proof of such custom is always admitted without pleading it.” And in Fish v. Crawford Mfg. Co., 120 Mich. 500 (79 N. W. 793):
“The plaintiff claims that by a local custom the seller of lumber to Chicago or Milwaukee purchasers pays the entire of the inspection charges, at least in the first instance. The circuit judge left it to the jury to find whether the custom claimed to exist in fact prevailed, instructing the jury that a custom, in order to be controlling, must be definite, precise, and unvarying. It is contended that it was error to submit the question to the jury,, for two reasons: First, that the custom was not declared upon; and, second, that the evidence did not show
“A broker who procures insurance is a mere ‘go-between,’ and is not liable for a premium on a policy procured by him for another, unless he acts under a del credere commission, and this rule applies to marine insurance, unless abrogated by a usage, such as prevails in England. * *” 2 Cooley’s Briefs on Ins. 917, citing Mannheim Ins. Co. v. Hollander (D. C.) 112 Fed. 549.
“But the failure to include a counterclaim arising out of some independent transaction does not necessarily prevent an account rendered from becoming an account stated as to everything embodied therein, if no objection is made thereto within a reasonable time.”
If the account of the plaintiff only be stated, showing the amount due, an acknowledgment or admission thereof is sufficient to constitute it as stated, although the defendant may have counterclaims which are admitted: Ware v. Manning, 86 Ala. 238 (5 South. 682). And in Filer v. Peebles, 8 N. H. 226, it was held that where an account was stated by the parties, and an amount agreed upon as due plaintiff within certain dates, but the defendants claimed something on a prior account, there is a sufficient stating of account for the amount named, subject only to the right of the defendant to set off any prior claim not included therein. See, also, Normandin v. Gratton, 12 Or. 505 (8 Pac. 653), and Nodine v. Bank, 41 Or. 386 (68 Pac. 1109).
We think it was error for the court to grant the motion for a nonsuit.
The judgment of the lower court is therefore reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial. Reversed.