34 Pa. Super. 478 | Pa. | 1907
Opinion by
The appellant’s counsel rest his demand, for a reversal of the judgment upon two propositions: first, there was a variance between the plaintiff’s allegata and probata which entitled the defendant to binding instructions in bis favor; second, the contract upon which recovery was had being that the parties would share future losses in a transaction in which the plaintiff acted for both, it was a condition precedent to the right to sue for contribution that the plaintiff render to the defendant an account of the transaction and make a demand for the amount due, which he failed to do. In the determination of these questions it will be necessary to refer to the course pursued by the defendant upon the trial, as well as to the pleadings and evidence.
The plaintiff alleged in his statement of claim, in substance, that pursuant to the defendant’s request he shipped to a customer of the defendant at Depew, near Buffalo, New York, a certain quantity of lumber of different sizes, for which the defendant agreed to pay the prices specified in the written order; that these prices and the sums the plaintiff paid for car service, freight and storage, amounted in the aggregate to $818.48; and that the only credits to which the defendant was entitled were for a payment of $150 on account, made by him, and a similar payment of $100 made by one W. W. Brown. The other averments of the statement relative to the controversy, and to the negotiations subsequent to the deliveiy of the lumber, which led to an arrangement or agreement tending to an adjustment of the claim, which arrangement or agreement, the statement alleges, was procured by deception, and, upon discovery of the deception, was repudiated by the plaintiff, constitute no essential part of the statement of the plaintiff’s cause of action. They were evidently introduced to rebut an anticipated defense, and it is a general rule of common-law pleading, which is equally applicable to pleading under our statute, that a plaintiff is not bound to anticipate, and, therefore, is not compelled to notice and remove in his declaration every possible answer, objection or defense with which the adversary may oppose him: 1 Chitty’s Pleading, * 222. A departure from this rule often tends to confusion: and, in general it is safe in pleading in actions at law to go upon the principle that it is
But it is claimed that the court in submitting the case to the jury permitted the plaintiff to recover upon another and materially different cause of action. The defendant pleaded non assumpsit, payment and set-off. Neither in his affidavit of defense nor in his evidence did he dispute the contract alleged and testified to by the plaintiff or the delivery of the lumber. What he alleged was, that after its arrival at Depew a dispute arose between him and the plaintiff as to whether the lumber was “up to grade,” that he refused to accept it, and that in settlement of the controversy a new agreement was made. This agreement, according to the testimony of his witnesses, was that the plaintiff would dispose of the lumber to the best advantage and that the defendant would bear one-half of the loss, which loss was to be measured by the difference between the cost of the lumber to the plaintiff at Depew and the price for which he should sell it. Upon cross-examination of the plaintiff (with the same effect, and no other, as if he had
Judgment affirmed.