62 P. 925 | Idaho | 1900
This action was brought to recover $1,072.28, stated in two causes of action. It appears from the record that the respondent (who was defendant in the court below) entered into a contract with the Northern Pacific Railway Company, whereby he agreed to furnish said company thirty-five thousand ties at the rate of twenty-four cents for first-class and seventeen cents for second-class ties, and thereafter, on the fifteenth day of November, 1898, the respondent entered into a contract with the appellant corporation, the Idaho Mercantile Company, whereby it was to have an equal share in all profits and losses that might accrue from the sale of said thirty-five thousand ties to the Northern Pacific Company. The appellant
The first error assigned is, the court erred in granting the motion for a nonsuit, as said motion failed to specify the point or ground on which said motion was based. The motion referred to was orally made, and the transcript shows it to be as follows: “At this time the defendant moved for a nonsuit herein, and the jury was duly admonished and excused during the argument.” We think the rule well settled that a nonsuit cannot stand unless the ground upon which it is supported was called to the attention of the court and the plaintiff at the time the motion is made; or, in other words, the moving party must specify particularly the points relied on for such nonsuit, and
It was error to exclude the evidence tendered by the appellant to prove the oral contract alleged in the complaint. All acts and declarations of the parties offered and tending to prove or establish the oral contract alleged in the complaint should have been admitted on the trial, and it was error to exclude such evidence. The judgment must be reversed, and it so ordered. Costs are awarded to the appellant.