39 Tenn. 116 | Tenn. | 1858
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was an action originally commenced before a justice of the peace, and carried by appeal to the Circuit Court, where the plaintiff below had judgment for $76 19; and the defendant below has appealed in error to this Court.
The Circuit Judge charged the jury, that if Stewart was the general agent of the defendant to superintend, control, and manage the cemetery grounds, and that the disposition, or renting of the house occupied by Shubert, come within the scope of that agency, and that Stewart, as such agent, had agreed with Shubert that he might occupy the house free of rent, in that case the defendant would be bound by the act of - its agent, though in violation of his instructions, unless Shubert knew that Stewart was violating his instructions.
The counsel of the plaintiff in error insists that this charge is erroneous, not because, as an abstract proposition, it is not the law, but because it is based upon a suppositious state of facts which do not exist, and that it misled the jury.
He maintains that C. W. Nance was the general agent of the company, and that Stewart was superintendent of .the work, and that there is not the slightest evidence of his general agency, or that he had authority to rent, or did rent the house of the company to Shubert.
If the jury, therefore, rejected the set-off claimed by the company against Shubert, for rent and firewood, we think they were well warranted by the proof. .
But if the charge were merely abstract, having no relevancy to any evidence in the cause, and were erroneous, much less if free of error, we do not understand it to be a ground of reversal; certainly not, unless it can be shown to have done harm to the party against whom the verdict is given. 2 Meigs’ Dig., 775 and 776.
The next error assigned, is in relation to an item in
There is no attempt to show any want of authority in the Treasurer to make this promise, and if need be, we are authorized to presume it, unless the contrary be shown. Angelí & Ames on Corporations, sections 290, 291, a, 292, 293, 298, 309.
By the purchase of the debt of Cunningham upon the company, the plaintiff acquired only an equitable interest in it, it being merely an open account, and, therefore, the promise of the company to the plaintiff to pay him, may, upon common law principles, have been necessary to enable the plaintiff, at law, to maintain the action in his own name. Vide, the note to Nelson v. Marley, 2 Yer., 576, and authorities there collected.
It is only in this aspect of the case that the promise of the company, or its treasurer, can be at ail material, for, manifestly, the company owed Cunningham the $27.75, and the plaintiff had purchased the debt, and was entitled to collect it of the company.
It is manifest the statute of frauds can have nothing to do with this promise of the company, since it was simply to pay its own debt to the plaintiff, instead of to Cunningham, the original creditor, he having as
It is next assigned for error, that the Court received parol evidence to explain the receipts found in the record from the plaintiff, and from Cunningham to the company, and to show that the debts for which they were given had not been paid: There was no error in this. 1 Greenl. Ev., sec. 305; Angelí & Ames on Corporations, sec. 294; 2 Meigs’ Dig., 859.
Besides, it does not appear that any specific objection was made to this evidence. It is contained in the depositions of Thomas and James Stewart, and they contain much other testimony entirely competent. A general objection therefore, such as was made to the reading of these depositions, because of the alleged incompetency of the witnesses, they being competent, did not reach the particular part of the proof bearing on these receipts.
The record shows that on the 17th of February, 1858, the plaintiff took a non-suit, and on the next day, upon the application of the plaintiff, it was, by order of the Circuit Court, set aside, and the cause re-instated as before, and the plaintiff taxed with the costs of that term.
The record does not show the cause of the non-suit, nor the reason for setting it aside; and no exception is made to the action of the Court.
At the next term, and after the cause was tried, the defendant moved the Circuit Court .to tax the plaintiff with all the costs of the cause up to the time of the non-suit. This the Court refused to do, and exception
Judgment affirmed.