78 Ind. App. 175 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1922
— The material averments of appellee’s complaint against appellants are, in substance, as follows: That on February 2,1918, appellants, as partners, being the owners of two pens of corn, estimated by appellants to be about 1,000 bushels, and represented by them to be good corn, entered into a verbal agreement with appellee, whereby they sold to appellee the corn at and for the price of one dollar per bushel of seventy pounds, the corn to be weighed. In the delivery of the corn to appellee’s premises, each party was to haul one-half thereof. On the day the corn was purchased, as a part of the contract, appellee was to, and did, execute and deliver to appellants in payment for the corn, his promissory note for $940, due six months after date, with
It is apparent that two causes of action are improperly joined, but there was no demurrer for misjoinder, and no motion to separate the complaint into paragraphs. Appellants, being content to go to trial with the complaint as drawn, filed an answer in denial. A trial resulted in a verdict for appellee for $325.
The only error assigned is the action of the court in overruling appellants’ motion for a new trial.
Instruction No. 2, given by the court on its own motion is as follows: “If the plaintiff has established all of the material allegations of his complaint by a fair preponderance of the evidence given in the cause, then he is entitled to a verdict, but if he has failed you should find for the defendant.”
It is earnestly contended by appellants that the com
It is urged by appellants that the complaint does not state a cause of action, for the reason that in as much as appellee had executed and delivered to appellants the $940 note, the verbal contract of sale could not be pleaded or proved to vary the terms of such note. Appellants have misconceived the nature of the action, which in no way attacks or questions the validity of the note. Appellee’s suit, in so far as he ' seeks to recover the amount overpaid by him on his contract for the purchase of the corn, was for money had and received. As was said by the Supreme Court in Ashton v. Shepherd (1889), 120 Ind. 69, 22 N. E. 98, an action for money had and received is equitable in its nature “and is based, not upon a promise, but upon the fact of the receipt of money by one from another through the medium of oppression, imposition, extortion or deceit, or by mistake of fact, or without consideration, or upon a consideration which has failed, from which the law implies a promise to repay.” A mistake had been made in the estimate as to the amount of corn in the pens; and appellee having given his note for a sum in excess of the purchase price of the corn at one dollar per bushel, which was the price agreed upon, there was a partial failure of consideration for the note, which having been transferred to the bank, had been paid by appellee, with interest. Under these circumstances, the law implies a promise on the part of appellants to return to appellee the amount of the over
The evidence shows that the corn, at the time it was purchased, was in rail pens; and it is urged by appellants that through the cracks of the pens the corn could have been, and was, seen by appellee, and that since there is no allegation or proof of fraud or express warranty, the doctrine of caveat emptor applies, and that, therefore, the verdict is not sustained by the evidence, and that certain instructions given by the court were erroneous. It is not necessary to discuss the question thus raised, further than to say, that under the evidence as shown by the record the amount of the verdict is not in excess of the sum which would have been fixed by the members of the jury if they had given to appellants one dollar per bushel for all of the corn, and had entirely ignored the question as to the unsound condition of the corn.
It clearly appears from the record that the merits of the cause have been fairly' determined.
Affirmed.