26 Kan. 329 | Kan. | 1881
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is an action brought in the district court of Cherokee county, by defendants in error, Beers and Sovereen, to recover from plaintiffs in error, Hobart and Con-don, for railroad ties and bridge timber, which they allege were converted by said Hobart and Condon. To this petition a general denial was filed; the case was tried before a jury, and verdict rendered for plaintiffs; $300 of such verdict having been remitted, judgment was entered upon the verdict, and from such judgment defendants bring error.
In a general way, the facts may be thus stated: In 1872, plaintiffs contracted with the M. C. & N. W. Rid. Co. to furnish ties and timber for the construction of the road between Minersville, Missouri, and Oswego, Kansas. In pursuance of such contract, they did deliver a large amount of ties and timber. Shortly after the work was completed from Miners-ville to Brownsville, Kansas, the work ceased, on account of inability on the part of the company to complete the road. At that time, west of Brownsville, along the line of the road, plaintiffs had placed a certain amount of ties and timber. Thereafter plaintiffs brought suit against the railroad company for ties delivered and accepted, and recovered judgment, and sought to assert a mechanics’ lien. During all this time, these ties and timber not used in the tracjs; remained piled along the line of the road at or near what is called by the witnesses, the Schnier place. In 1876, Seligman & Macy, the trustees of the bond-holders of said company, contracted with defendants, Hobart and Condon, to complete the road west to Oswego. In executing this contract, the defendants took pos
Evidently three questions stand out as vital: First, did the ties and timber placed at and near the Sehnier place along the line of this road belong to plaintiffs? Second, if they did so belong to plaintiffs, what amount was appropriated by defendants to their use? Third, what was the value of the amount thus appropriated? That these ties and timber originally belonged to the plaintiffs, is not disputed. But the contention on the part of the defendants is, that they had been delivered to and accepted by the railroad company; that therefore they belonged to the railroad company, whether paid for or not by said company; and that in using them defendants were responsible only to the railroad company, and not to plaintiffs. Secondly, they insist that for these ties and timber, plaintiffs, affirming a delivery to the railroad company, sued and recovered judgment in the action above referred to, to foreclose a mechanics’ lien, and are therefore now estopped to assert that they are still the owners. Thirdly, they insist that they did not take the amount of ties and timber which plaintiffs allege; and finally, that what they did take was not of the value charged. It will be obvious from this general statement, that a pivotal question is, whether the plaintiffs, having sued and recovered judgment against the railroad company for ties and timber delivered and accepted, were concluded thereby from showing that the ties and timber for which this action was brought were not included in such action and judgment, and were still the property of these plaintiffs, such proceedings to the contrary notwithstanding. Stating the facts a little more in detail, they are as follows: The contract of the plaintiffs with the railroad company was to furnish ties and timber along the line of the railroad between Minersville, Missouri, and Oswego, Kansas. The road was not then completed by the company to Oswego, but its construction stopped at'Brownsville, Kan
Passing on to the other questions in this case, it is insisted that the court erred in admitting as evidence the following memorandum of agreement between plaintiffs and the railroad company, signed by the superintendent of the railroad 1 company, under which plaintiffs delivered their ties and timber to the company:
“Carthage, Mo., Oct. 10th, 1872.
“ This agreement, made this day between H. R. Beers and S. M. Sovereen, and the Memphis, Carthage & Northwestern Railroad Co., witnesseth: That the said Beers and Sovereen are to receive thirty-five dollars per thousand, B. M., for
(Signed) E. H. Brown,
Supt. M. G. & N. W. R. R.”
We see no error in this ruling. The price named therein for ties and timber in 1872 did not control as to the price of such ties and timber appropriated in 1876, but
Again, some testimony was admitted over the objections of defendants referring alone to the value of the ties and timber
Again, counsel earnestly challenges the verdict of the jury both as to the amount of property appropriated by defendants, its value, and also as to the question whether title was in plaintiffs or not. Upon these questions of fact thus challenged, we remark that they must be settled by the triers of fact, the tribunal before which the witnesses appear. Secondly, that as we read the testimony the preponderance was with the defendants, and that conceding the right of plaintiffs to recover for some property appropriated by defendants, they have obtained a judgment for more than in fact they were entitled to. Still, we repeat that upon the testimony as it appears in the record, there is that upon which the verdict of the jury
One further question we shall notice — one in which we are constrained to think that the court erred, and that the error is of a nature to wrong plaintiffs in error of substantial rights. A vital question, as we have heretofore intimated, is whether the ties and timber in controversy had been in fact delivered to and accepted by the company. We have shown that the proceedings in the mechanics’-lien action were not- necessarily conclusive upon this question. Now putting the record of such proceedings out of consideration, does the other testimony show that the delivery by the plaintiffs of the ties and timber along and near the line of the road, and the action of the company, whatever it was, completed a transfer of the title to the ties and timber to the company? The contract between plaintiffs and the company is in evidence. It provided that the plaintiffs were to receive a certain amount for ties and timber delivered along the line of the road, subject to the inspection and acceptance of the chief engineer. The question then is, under what circumstances title to the ties and timber so placed by plaintiffs would pass to the company. The ruling of the district court, as we understand the instructions, was to the effect that no title would pass to the company until after a personal inspection and acceptance by its chief engineer, unless both plaintiffs and the company waived such inspection and acceptance, and consented to inspection and acceptance by some other officer. Eecurring to the testimony, it will be noticed that some of it tends to show that no inspection marks were on these ties and timber; some of it that these ties and timber were inspected and accepted by the chief engineer and as expressly stated in the contract; and some of it that they were inspected and accepted by an
Whenever in a contract there is inserted a stipulation for the benefit of one party, as a general rule such stipulation may be waived by that party, and it is error to say to the jury that a waiver of such stipulation must be consented to by both parties, or is binding on neither. The rule is, that if the party benefited thereby waives it, the other may not complain. So in this case, if plaintiffs, in pursuance of their contract, did all they could do to effectuate a delivery, and the company by any officer in fact inspected and accepted the ties and timber, the company by its act has waived that stipulation which was inserted for its benefit, and the plaintiffs cannot complain because it has so waived it. We think, in view of the scope of the testimony, that this ruling of the district court was not only erroneous, but probably wrought substantial injury to the material rights of the defendants. For this error, as well as for that respecting a sufficient explanation of the circumstances concerning the levy as heretofore stated, the judgment of the district court must be reversed, and the case remanded for a new trial.