89 Neb. 705 | Neb. | 1911
Plaintiff alleges that on or about February 17, 1906, he made an oral agreement with defendant that plaintiff should take charge of a certain brewery at Crete, Nebraska, and perform the duties of superintendent, manager, and brewmaster, and receive from defendant $75 a month therefor, which amount defendant agreed to pay; that he duly performed his part of the agreement and worked steadily from said date until January 1, 1907, when it was orally agreed between plaintiff and defendant that plaintiff should receive from defendant for said services $125 a month, which defendant agreed to pay, and that plaintiff fulfilled his part of said new agreement
• Some minor questions are discussed in briefs of counsel, but, having reached the conclusion that the judgment must be reversed for the reason that it is not sustained by the evidence, such other questions need not be considered.
The record shows that on June 1, 1905, plaintiff, Otto Heink, together with P. A. Gavin and A. L. Knabe, organized and incorporated the Western Brewing Association of Crete, Nebraska. The articles of incorporation provided that its capital stock should be $100,000, to be divided into shares of $10 each; “said capital stock when subscribed for and issued shall be fully paid and non-
Keeping in mind the declaration which he said he made to defendant that he would have to have money for his services or he could not live, we are next met with the remarkable testimony by plaintiff that defendant told him in January, 1906, which was before the company had commenced to do business, that if he, plaintiff, would advance moneys for work, labor, material, and expenses in the business and construction work, as the payments came due, defendant would personally pay back all the money he had so advanced, and that, pursuant to that agreement, he advanced from time to time in 1906 and 1907 $750. The first time, according to. his testimony, that he made any demand upon Lewis to pay him the salary which had been accruing was in December, 1906, at which time he says defendant told him that when he sold his Dakota and Kansas land “he would pay me, and pay me everything back.”' He further testifies that on January 10, 1907, defendant showed him all the papers in his proposed land deal in Dakota and Kansas; that these papers were already made out to transfer the property; that defendant then told him that when he got the money from these lands he would pay him. He testifies: “I told him that I would not wait any longer, and went out. He came and called me back into the office, and told me if I would stay he would pay me, and also pay me extra for the trouble I had been put to.” He also testifies that Knabe and Gavin were there at the time. Knabe flatly denies any such conversation. Weber, a man who worked at one time for the association, testified to having two interviews with Lewis in Omaha in March or April, 1907. He says: “I telephoned Lewis, and he said he Was ready to close the land deal and he was to come down and
■ For the defense, defendant himself denied ever having in any manner agreed to pay the salaries of Heink or Gavin out of his personal funds. He admits that he was present at some of the times testified to by Gavin, but positively states that he made no promises to pay personally any of those accounts; that he subscribed
The above, in substance, is the testimony given upon the trial, and it is now insisted by plaintiff that this tes
This court is ever loath to interfere with the verdict of a jury which is based upon competent evidence and has received the approval of the district court; but, where an examination of the oral testimony presented, and of the undisputed facts and circumstances surrounding the transactions testified to, satisfies us that such verdict is unjust, and that the jury must have arrived at their verdict by considering the oral testimony alone, to the exclusion of such facts and circumstances, it is our duty to interfere and grant a new trial.
The judgment of the district court is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
Reversed.