112 Iowa 668 | Iowa | 1901
I. The claim of satisfaction is based on the following state of facts, as to which there is no controversy: -Plaintiff • entered into an oral agreement with the Standard Coal Company, through its general manager, George Merritt, to perform labor and furnish materials in the improvement of the -equipment of the mine, which labor and materials constituted the basis of the account on which the mechanic’s lien is ■ claimed. But at the same time said Merritt urged upon plaintiff his desire that the amount of plaintiff’s charges under this oral agreement should be traded out at a store operated by said Merritt and his two brothers under the firm name of Merritt Bros., and this arrangement plaintiff seems to have -substantially assented to, although he claims in his testi.mony that it was not a binding agreement. Plaintiff did, however, on his own account and by orders given to his employes, make purchases at the store of Merritt Bros., to an -amount slightly exceeding the amount of the account here sued upon. But in a suit by the assignee of the firm of Merritt Bros, against the plaintiff in this case to recover the amount •of his indebtedness to the firm he was held liable therefor, .and judgment' was rendered against him, notwithstanding the defense set up in his answer that the goods charged to him were received on his account against the Standard Coal Company. In this suit Bradley, who had in the meantime 'become the purchaser of the coal mine at a receiver’s sale, ■sought to intervene, but his petition was stricken from the files, and he in no way became a party to the adjudication. The question, then, is whether there was such an agreement "between plaintiff and the Standard Coal Company, through