15 Utah 161 | Utah | 1897
These two causes, being dependent upon the same facts, were by consent tried together by the court without a jury. The findings were in favor of the defendants, and the actions dismissed at plaintiff’s cost. A motion for a new trial was made and denied, and an appeal taken from the judgment and order to this court. While an appeal will not lie to this court from an order denying a motion for a new trial, under section 9, art. 8, of the constitution of Utah, yet on appeal from the judgment the errors committed by the trial court in denying motion for new trial may be reviewed, when properly embodied in a bill of exceptions, or otherwise properly preserved in the record, as decided in this court at this term in the case of White v. Pease, 15 Utah 170. Both cases at bar will be treated as one in this opinion.
This is a simple action for money had and received, ■and corresponds with the old common-law action of in-debitatus assumpsit. It is an action at law, and not a suit in equity. 1 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, p. 882; 2 Enc. Pl. & Prac. pp. 888-1016.
Appellant’s assignment of errors in his statement on motion for new trial is as follows: “(1) That the court erred in its findings of fact when it found that Visser gave his notes because the Cary-Lombard Company could not give notes, when the evidence showed the notes were given to enable Mader to show that Beggs & Co. owned the claim for $703, and to settle with his partner; when it found the Beggs yard had been turned over to the
As conclusions of law the court found substantially as follows: (1) That George Beggs & Co. took tbe notes of tbe several dealers, including tbe note of E. A. Visser, as the several promises of each of tbe makers of said notes, respectively, and that tbe indebtedness of said dealers
Appellant objects to the finding that the Beggs lumber .yard was turned over to the exchange, and insists that the evidence shows that it was turned over to the dealers. In view of the finding that the sale was made to the dealers individually and severally, and that they were severally, and,not jointly, liable, it is immaterial to whom the delivery was made under such sale. Besides, the finding is that the property purchased was turned over to W. II. Donnell as agent of the dealers. It is also insisted that the evidence shows that the Yisser notes were given to enable Mader to show that Beggs & Co. owned the claim for $703, and to settle with his partner, Beggs, and were not given because the Cary-Lombard Lumber Company could not, under its charter, give notes.' Taking the other findings to be correct, it is immaterial why the Yisser notes were given. If they were given as appellant contends, that would not prove that the Cary-Lombard Lumber Company was not liable to Beggs & Co. for its original apportionment of the Beggs & Co. material.