139 P. 999 | Mont. | 1914
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action was brought by plaintiff to recover $1,195, the balance of the purchase price of certain real and personal property sold by plaintiff to the defendant. The answer admits the purchases, the failure to pay the amounts demanded, and pleads two counterclaims: one for $16.2.50, the value of a certain horse — a part of the personal property sold by plaintiff — title to which failed, including also costs and expenses incurred in •connection therewith, and the other for $2,500, damages claimed
1. The defendant testified that plaintiff represented that 400 acres of the land could be irrigated, and that the land across Sun river was the best piece of land on the ranch; that he relied upon these statements and was deceived, as only 250 acres could be irrigated at most, and the land across Sun River was rocky, gravelly, and almost worthless. Upon cross-examination he was interrogated with reference to his relationship to plaintiff and to the land, and the reason which prompted him to rely upon plaintiff’s statements, if he did so. A part of his cross-
“I am seventy-one years old and have been in business ever since I was old enough to be in business; I never thought a lawsuit was liable to grow out of this transaction.
“Q. You have had a good many lawsuits?
“A. Yes, a few.
“Q. Four or five since you have been in Montana?
“Mr. Bishop: That is objected to as incompetent.
“The Court: Overrule the objection. (To this ruling counsel for defendant then and there excepts.)
“A. Not that I know of.
“Q. How many lawsuits did you have in Oklahoma?
“Mr. Bishop: We object to that as immaterial, not proper cross-examination, and incompetent.
*50 “The Court: Overrule the objection. (To this ruling of the court, defendant then and there duly excepted.)
“A. I have never had a suit I could get out of, unless I gave up everything I had, ’ ’ etc.
It is insisted that the attempt to exploit before the jury defendant’s litigious’ character constituted prejudicial error. So far as the answers of the witness are concerned, no prejudice could have resulted. They were not responsive to the questions, and do not indicate that defendant maintained the character which it is insisted the questions were designated to
From defendant’s own testimony it was disclosed that at the
The rule of cross-examination in vogue in this state was announced in Kipp v. Silverman, 25 Mont. 296, 64 Pac. 884, and has been repeated so often since that a reference to some of the cases suffices here. (Hefferlin v. Karlman, 30 Mont. 348, 76 Pac. 757; State v. Howard, 30 Mont. 518, 77 Pac. 50; State v. Biggs, 45 Mont. 400, 123 Pac. 410; Knuckey v. Butte Electric Ry. Co., 45 Mont. 106, 122 Pac. 280; Moss v. Goodhart, 47 Mont. 257, 131 Pac. 1071.)
In the present instance no one could say that defendant had not relied upon the statements which he claims the plaintiff made to him, but whether he did or not was an important inquiry, and, to determine the truth or falsity of his testimony, the relative situations of the parties at the time of the transaction apparently afforded the best means for ascertaining the probability or improbability of defendant’s story. (6 Ency. of Evidence 42; City of Tacoma v. Tacoma L. & Water Co., 17 Wash. 458, 50 Pac. 55.) If it should have been made to appear that defendant was inexperienced in the ways of the business world; that he was unsophisticated, provincial, could not read or write, or bore such intimate relationship to plaintiff as to warrant implicit confidence, the trial court might have accepted his story without question, but if, on the other hand, it was
2. Complaint is made of instruction No. 9, given by the court,
It is said that defendant’s right to recover thus depended upon whether he made an investigation of the land for himself before purchasing, and that this instruction was in effect a direction against him, since the word “investigate” means to make inquiry, and it is conceded that defendant did inquire
By instruction No. 11 the court, without objection, directed
Upon the whole case made, no reversible error appears, and the judgment and order are therefore affirmed.
'Affirmed.