28 Neb. 610 | Neb. | 1890
This was a suit brought by defendant in error against the plaintiff in error upon a written contract for the rental of a telephone. This contract is made a part of the petition, and contains among other provisions the following:
“In case communication is interrupted from any cause whatever, the only liability of the exchange shall be to abate the rent during such interruption, after twenty-four hours’ written notice thereof to-the Exchange. * * *
“ The subscriber requests the Nebraska Telephone Company to place in his premises one set of telephone instruments, as noted on the back hereof, and to connect them for his use with the company’s exchange until the first day of January, 1886, and thereafter until this agreement is can*611 celed by one month’s notice in writing being given from one party to the other, upon the terms and conditions stated above, which he hereby promises to keep and perform, and agrees to pay therefor to said company four dollars on the first day of every month.”
The answer is a general denial, and also that the plaintiff did put a telephone instrument in the defendant’s place of business, and that after being used a short time became absolutely worthless.
The reply was a general denial. The verdict was for the plaintiff.
It is not claimed that a written notice of defects in the telephone instrument was ever given the company, but it is contended that this provision of the written contract was waived by the company attempting to fix it after verbal complaint. On the trial the court permitted, over plaintiff’s objection, the defendant to prove that verbal notice was given, but afterwards this evidence was eliminated from the record, and the jury was instructed not to consider it. This is the first error complained of. We think this ruling of the court correct. Waiver of the written notice contemplated by the written contract was not in issue. In order to prove a waiver of the written notice, it should have been pleaded in the answer, as it constituted new matter of defense. (Jones v. Seward Co., 10 Neb., 154.)
It is contended that the court erred in not allowing the defendant to prove that the telephone instrument was defective. This the defendant attempted to do on cross-examination of some of plaintiff’s witnesses, and this objection was properly sustained, for the reason that the witnesses, when examined in chief, did not testify as to the condition of the instrument. Cross-examinations should be confined to matters covered by the examination in chief.
The following question was propounded by the defendant to Mr. Taylor while a witness for the defense: “ What kind of an instrument was this as being a good or poor
Testimony was introduced by the plaintiff in error which tended to show that the telephone instrument failed to work well. Evidence was given by the company tending to establish that the instrument was a good one. The testimony, while somewhat conflicting, sustains the verdict of the jury.
The judgment is affirmed.
Judgment appirmed.