61 Ind. 374 | Ind. | 1878
Complaint by the appellees, against the appellant, on the common counts, for goods sold and delivered, work and labor done, materials furnished, and money had and received.
Answer, general denial.
Application by the appellant to make Charles W. Hill a party defendant, on written petition, overruled; exceptions. Motion for continuance, on affidavit of appellant, overruled; exceptions. Trial by the court; 'finding for appellees. Motion for a new trial overruled ; judgment; exception.
Appeal.
1. The application of the appellant to make Hill a party alleges, that the articles in controversy in this suit were contracted for and obtained by Hill from the appellees, upon his own credit and account; and that Hill was hound in a written contract to furnish said material for the construction of a house for appellant; that appellant has paid Hill for the same, according to the award of an arbitration between the parties; and that the appellees seek to make the appellant liable for the material, etc.
According to the facts stated in this application, the appellee is not liable to the appellants in this action ; he had, therefore, a complete defence to the action, without making Hill a party. The court did not err in overruling the motion.
2. Hor did the court err in overruling the motion for
3. The main and more difficult question in the case is: Does the evidence sustain the finding of the court?
The following facts are not seriously in controversy:
That Charles ~W. Hill had agreed, by a written contract with the appellant, to furnish the material, and build for him a dwelling-house; that said contract between Ilill and appellant was known to the appellees; that Hill obtained the woi’lc and material in controversy from the appellees, and used the same in the construction of +he house for the appellant; that the appellees charged the work and material so obtained to Hill, in their regular account current, with other material charged to Hill for other purposes, on their account book, by the item, commencing on the 20th day of April, 1875, and ending on the 26th day of February, 1876; that, up to the time of the trial, the account for the items in this controversy stood upon the books of the appellees open against Ilill; that, during the time the account was thus open, the appellant delivered certain promissory notes to the apj>cllees for one hundred and fifty dollars, which was credited to Hill on the account; that there were no charges made on the books of the appellees, against the appellant, for any of the items in controversy, at any time, and no credit given to the appellant on the books of the appellees, for the one hundred and fifty dollars so paid by said promissory notes and credited to Ilill; that, before this suit was brought, the appellant had paid Hill all that was due him for work and labor and material for building the house of the appellant.
In addition to these facts, McKinney, one of the appellees, testifies that the appellees, about the 20th of April— the date of the first item of the account in controversy—
Eshelman, the other appellee, testified to the same contract, made at the same time, and that Elynn was present; and that he told the appellant they would not let Hill have the lumber on his own account, because he •owed them as much then as they could carry for him, and explained why the book account was made against Hill, hy saying: “We were doing other work for Hill, and charged him with all of it, but noted in the .book, so as to he able to point out every piece of work that went to the different parties.”
The appellant testified, denying any contract made for himself with the appellees; that all the conversation he ever had with the appellees related to getting the materia by Hill for his, the appellant’s, house, and denies that he ever agreed to pay them anything; that William Elynn was present at the conversation, but that it was not in the month of April, but later in the year.
William Elynn testified that he was in Lanesville, Kentucky, attending college, during the mouths of April, May and June, and that he was with the appellant, at the shop of the appellees, on the 23d day of July, 1875, .at the time the conversation took place.
John Brownlee testified to a statement of the appellant that he had money to pay to the appellees, but did not know what it was for, nor whether it was to be -paid on his own account, or for Hill.
This statement, we believe, fairly presents the facts, which may be held as undisputed, and the testimony as to the facts which are controverted.
The appellees may very honestly believe that they made a binding contract with the appellant to do the work and
As the appellees have brought their action upon the alleged original contract of the appellant to pay for the' work and material furnished, and not upon an alleged promise of the appellant to pay the debt of Hill, no question under the statute of frauds arises in the case; nor is there any question before us as to what might be the rights of the appellees, under a material man’s lien, to secure any amount that might remain due from the appellant to Hill, for building the house into which the work and material done and furnished by the appelleesentered.
We think the court erred, not so much upon a question of fact, as by a mistake in applying the law to the facts. The question involved, indeed, is rather one arising in law, than upon the weight of evidence.
The judgment is reversed, at the costs of the appellees, and the cause remanded, with instructions to sustain the motion for a new trial, and for further proceedings.