174 P. 612 | Wyo. | 1918
In this case, in the district court, Beaumier was plaintiff, and King was defendant. Plaintiff’s second amended petition, upon which the cause was tried, contained eight counts or separate causes of action. In the first count he claimed $400 for threshing 10,000 bushels of oats for defendant in 1909, which with interest amounted to $502.20-. In the second count he claimed $84.00 for threshing 2,100’ bushels of oats in 1910, which with interest amounted to $106.10. In the third count he claimed $362.04 for threshing 9,051
The answer contained first, a denial of the allegations of each count in the petition; and second, alleged as a counterclaim, “That said plaintiff and defendant entered into a co-partnership arrangement to construct certain work which is commonly known and called the Lake James Irrigation System. That said plaintiff, through mismanagement and misappropriation of funds, damaged said defendant in the sum of $5,000.00.” For which sum he prayed judgment against plaintiff.
Plaintiff by reply denied the allegations of the counterclaim.
The case was tried to a jury, which returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the amount claimed in each of the first four counts of the petition, and in his favor for $295.58
The verdicts on the 1st and 4th counts are contrary to the evidence. There is an admitted credit of $1,765.89, and there is no evidence that either party applied it to any particular item or items of the indebtedness. The several claims being of .the same grade, and neither party having elected to apply the payment on any particular item or items of the indebtedness, the rule is that it shall be applied in payment and satisfaction of the item or items first becoming due. (30 Cyc. 1244, and authorities cited in notes.) Applying that rule to the present case, the admitted credit would have more than paid and satisfied the amount found due on said counts.
Another ground contained in the motion for a new trial is newly discovered evidence. One John PI. Brison, in his affidavit in support of that ground of the motion, states, in substance, that in the spring of 1910 he had a conversation with plaintiff, in which conversation plaintiff stated that prior to said time he and King had been in partnership in work on the Take James proposition and had suffered severe losses and that King had to and did stand said losses. That he (plaintiff) had entered into a contract with King to work for him with his engine on the King reservoir until it was completed for which he was to receive no compensation other than fifty dollars per month, with which he could support his family during said period. That he then informed me that he was working for King upon his reservoir under the terms of said agreement in order to repay King his portion of the losses sustained ¡by said partnership. This evidence is competent, material and relevant to the issues ofi the theory upon which the case was tried. The affidavit of defendant in support of the motion for a new trial sufficiently shows it to be newly discovered evidence which he could not have discovered by the exercise of reasonable diligence before the trial and that it did not come to his knowledge until after the trial. This new evidence was not merely
Reversed and remanded.