25 Neb. 439 | Neb. | 1889
Plaintiff in error, by its petition filed in the district court, alleged, in substance, that it was a corporation duly organized under the laws of the state of Kansas, and that on or about the 1st day of April, 1886, it sold and delivered to- defendant one combination spring wagon, for which defendant agreed to pay the sum of $100; that no part of said sum had been paid; and that there was due from defendant to plaintiff the sum of $100, with interest from April 1, 1886, for which judgment was prayed.
Defendant answered,, denying the allegations of the petition as to the sale, and alleging that he bought the wagon referred to in the petition from one George Yale, who at the time was doing business, in his own name, as a dealer in farm machinery, buggies, wagons, etc., in the city of Columbus, and that at said time the wagon was in Yale’s possession, who was the apparent, and claimed to be the real, owner thereof, and defendant believing that Yale was the sole owner of the wagon, and with no knowledge that any one else claimed an interest in or
The reply consisted of a general denial.
A trial was had to a jury, which returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff in error for $25, for which judgment was rendered. Plaintiff alleges error, and brings the cause into this court for review.
The contract, under which it is claimed the wagon was furnished to Yale by plaintiff, is attached to the bill of •exceptions, and is of too great a length to be here copied. It must be sufficient to say that it was, in substance, the usual agent’s contract for the sale of machinery, providing that the title should remain in principal, that the agent ¡should sell the same on commission, guarantee the notes taken, if any, take proper care of the material furnished him, etc.
The agent of plaintiff, Mr. Welch, was called as a witness, who testified to the execution of the contract by Yale, ¡and that sometime thereafter he was in Columbus, and was informed of the sale of .the wagon to defendant; that he, 5n company with Mr. Yale, called upon defendant, when •defendant agreed to execute a note to plaintiff for $100, the price of the wagon, but declined to do so until certain defects in the wagon were remedied, which was done, but •that he afterwards refused to execute, the note. This conversation was denied by defendant absolutely. He was then asked to state the contract by which he purchased the
It is claimed that the testimony of defendant, in which he detailed the contract between himself and George Yale (Yale being deceased), should not have been admitted, for the reason that the same is prohibited by section 329 of the civil code. This section provides, in substance, that no person having a direct legal interest in the result of any civil action or proceeding, where the adverse party is the-representative of a deceased person, shall be permitted to testify to any transaction or conversation had between the deceased person and the witness, unless the evidence of the deceased person shall Have been taken and read in evidence by the adverse party in regard to such transaction or conversation, or unless such representative shall have introduced a witness who shall have testified in regard to-such transaction or conversation, etc.
We are unable to see that the court erred in its rulings in that particular.
.There is nothing in the petition which discloses the fact that plaintiff brings its action as a representative of Yale. In fact, it appears that such is not the case. The action is founded on an alleged contract between plaintiff and defendant, the allegation being that plaintiff, by its agent, Yale, sold and delivered the wagon to defendant. If defendant had purchased the property from Yale, believing it to have been his (Yale’s) property, as he testified, we can see no reason why he could not testify to that fact when sued for its price by a third party.
In the outset of the trial plaintiff’s agent, Welch, was called upon the stand, who testified that Yale was engaged in business solely on commission; that he -was a man without means, and had no goods of his own for sale; that he was furnished a sign by plaintiff, which he was directed to put across the sidewalk in front of his office, and that upon that sign were printed the words, “Agency of the Caldwell Wagon — George Yale, Agent.”
After the testimony on the part of defendant was closed, plaintiff sought to enter again upon the investigation of the manner in which Yale was doing business, the appearance of his place of business, from signs and otherwise, which, upon objection, v, e think was properly excluded. Plaintiff seems to have taken the burden in this respect in the first stages of the trial, and it could not properly be permitted to go over the same ground, as in rebuttal.
It is insisted that Yale had no power to barter the goods,, and that he could sell plaintiff’s go'ods only for money, and could not turn them out to pay his own debts. There can be no doubt of this proposition. And had defendant purchased the wagon in the manner detailed by him, knowing that it was the property of a third party, left for sale, plaintiff might have had a cause of action against him,, either in replevin or for the conversion of the property.. But that is not this case.
Plaintiff, by its petition, assumes the attitude of saying it is true that Yale sold this wagon to defendant; it is true-that defendant has, in part, paid the purchase price; but that sale not having been made in accordance with the authority of the agent, we will affirm it to the extent of the sale, but disaffirm it so far as the payment was concerned. This they could not do. Chariton Plow Co. v. Davidson, 16 Neb., 377.
Complaint is made of an instruction given to the jury by the court, upon its own motion, but as no exception was taken, the instruction cannot be noticed.
Certain instructions were asked by plaintiff, which the court refused to give, and to which refusal plaintiff excepted. It is not deemed necessary to set out these in
The judgment of the district court is therefore affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.