178 P. 230 | Or. | 1919
It appears in evidence that the defendant traded for a store and its contents owned by the Quayle- Johnston Company in Eugene. He claimed at the trial that it was represented to him the stock would not amount in value to exceed $1,500; that it inventoried $2,600 and that he refused to take it at more than $1,500, so that the negotiations were prolonged for something like three months before the deal was closed, although he took over the building and part of the goods when the inventory was finished. The plaintiff claims that about November 28, 1916, on receipt of the inventory, the defendant employed him at $75 per month to manage the business for him. The defendant denies all this. The deal transferring the concern was finally completed about January 25, 1917;
“On or about the eighteenth day of February, 1868, plaintiffs sold and delivered to the defendant 4,000 pounds of flour, and that the same was worth $212.”
That case decided in effect that a breach of contract, whether express or implied, must be alleged by one who would recover on it, and is distinguished by the later case of Pioneer Hardware Co. v. Farrin, 55 Or. 590 (107 Pac. 456), where Mr. Chief Justice Moore, speaking for the court, said:
“It is doubtful if the decision in that case (Bowen v. Emmerson) is based on principle, for the rule is quite well settled that, where a sale and delivery of goods is alleged, and nothing is said in the pleading about the time of payment, it will be presumed that payment was to have been made on delivery.”
Speaking also of the promise to pay, the opinion there contains this language:
“It will be remembered it is stated as a cause of action that at the special instance and request of the defendant the plaintiff sold and delivered to him goods, wares, merchandise, etc., and performed for him labor*250 and services, but no promise to pay therefor is alleged in the complaint. Nor was such an averment requisite, for an allegation therein of a sale and delivery of goods and of the performance of labor which were made and rendered at the special instance and request of the defendant necessarily implies a promise on his part to pay the reasonable value thereof.”
The form of the complaint in the instant case is substantially like one approved in 18 Enc. Forms, 1065. It is asserted that the labor and services were rendered and performed by the plaintiff for the defendant at his special instance and request, during certain dates, at an agreed rate, amounting to a certain sum stated, no part of which has been paid except a certain other sum stated. The defendant had notice of the grounds of the plaintiff’s complaint, sufficient at least after the verdict to sustain a judgment, no objection having been taken by demurrer or motion.
“A witness is not entitled to give a part of the conversation unless he can give the entire conversation. It would be wrong and prejudicial.”
The defendant excepted and stated that:
“We expect to show by this witness in substance, the following conversation over the telephone: That Mr. Johnston in this conversation asked Mr. Fitzhugh to make a settlement and complete the transaction between them. That Mr. Quayle was gone; that Mr. Fitzhugh refused to acknowledge Mr.' Johnston in the deal at all.”
The objection was again urged to the offer and sustained. We deduce from a somewhat extended examination of the decisions that a.telephone conversation properly identified may be introduced in evidence on the same ground as any other conversation, provided it is otherwise competent testimony. Another principle is that where a party installs in his place of business a telephone connected with a public system, he impliedly'invites communication with himself by that
“When a person places himself in connection with the telephone system through an instrument in his office, he thereby invites communication in relation to his business, through that channel. Conversations so held are admissible in evidence, as personal interviews by a customer with an unknown clerk in charge of an*254 ordinary shop would be in relation to the business there carried on. The fact that the voice at the telephone was not identified does not render the conversation inadmissible.”
In St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. McQuaid, 114 Miss. 430 (75 South. 255), it was said:
“As to the law touching conversations over telephones : We think the law is well settled that such conversations are admissible in evidence. The fact that the voice at the telephone is not identified does not render the conversation inadmissible. The weight to be given such evidence is largely left to the jury, or to the chancellor,- when the case is tried without a jury.”
The cases on the subject are collected in the note to Theisen v. Detroit Taxicab & Transfer Co., 200 Mich. 136 (166 N. W. 901, L. R. A. 1918D, 715). See, also, Gzowski Co. v. Forst, 20 Ann. Cas. 704, and note; Kent v. Cobb, 24 Colo. App. 264 (133 Pac. 424); Liverpool, London & Globe Ins. Co. v. Hinton, 116 Miss. 754 (77 South. 662), and Hancock v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co., 81 Misc. Rep. 159 (142 N. Y. Supp. 352). To say that a witness could not detail a part of a conversation without being able to give all of it, owing to the fact that one of the participants was beyond his hearing, was erroneous.
“Evidence shall correspond with the substance of the material allegations and be relevant to the question in dispute. Collateral questions shall therefore be avoided. It is, however, within the discretion of the court to permit inquiry into a collateral fact, when such fact is directly connected with the question in dispute, and is essential to its proper determination, or when it affects the credibility of a witness”: Section 725, L. O. L.
Governed by this rule, we cannot say that the court abused its discretion. It is plain that no prejudicial error can be predicated upon the refusal of the court
Affirmed. Rehearing Denied.