60 Wis. 183 | Wis. | 1884
This case, as presented to this court, is very voluminous, and yet is very plain and simple in respect to the legal questions involved. It is, in short and substance, that the defendants Warner and Meyer entered into a contract with the defendant Dean to build and construct for them a building on a part of a city lot which belonged to them in severalty; the building to have a common hall in the center. Dean, the contractor, wished to obtain lumber for said building from the J. A. Treat Lumber Company, and brick from the plaintiff Carter. After the plaintiff, the lumber company, had furnished a small part of the lumber, it refused to furnish any more unless- the defendants would be responsible for payment, and the evidence tends to prove that the defendants did so agree in respect to past as well as future lumber delivered or to be delivered, and to pay the same on the order of the contractor, Dean. The defendants did pay said plaintiff more than the past indebtedness of Dean to it for lumber, and this suit for a mechanic’s lien on the building is for that which was afterwards furnished by the company on the credit of the defendants. In respect to the plaintiff Carter, the testimony tends to show that the defendants promised jointly to pay him for the brick he should furnish for the building, and that he did so furnish the brick on their credit alone.
The contracts and payments and all other facts were submitted to the jury under a charge from the court, which
As to the law of the case further, that part of the agreement relating to lumber already delivered on the credit of Dean, the contractor, may have been invalid by the statute of frauds, (a question, however, we do not decide, in a case
’ This is really all there is of this voluminous case, and the law involved in it is either statutory or elementary, and no authorities need be cited other than as above. The case seems to have been fairly and fully tried by an able court, very able counsel, and the jury seems to have arrived at a correct verdict. The case being in equity, errors as to the admission of evidence or of instructions to the jury cannot be assigned as in an action at law. But the governing principles of both law and equity in the case are, of course, subject to review in this court. ¥e are unable to see in what respect the judgment is not strictly correct.
By the Court — The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.