79 F. 294 | 8th Cir. | 1897
This is an action -in replevin, which was brought by the Catholicon Company, the defendant in error, against the New England Furniture & Carpet Company, the plaintiff in error, hereafter called the “Furniture Company,” to recover the possession of certain hotel, furniture. The property in controversy was originally bought by the Catholicon Hot Springs Company of the furniture company, in February, 1893, and two notes, aggregating $1,750, made by third parties, were indorsed and delivered to the furniture company in part payment therefor, the understanding being that the residue of the purchase money, about $1,000, should be paid witbin 30 days thereafter. In April, 1893, the furniture in controversy was sold and delivered by the Catholicon Hot Springs Company to a new corporation, the Catholicon Company, which is the present defendant in error. In May, 1893, after the last-mentioned sale, the furniture company and the Ca
The defendant below requested the court to give 11 instructions, all of which were refused, although the substance of some of the instructions was embraced in the court's charge to the jury. Tins ,exception which was saved to the refusal of (hese instructions was taken in gross to the refusal of all, and. as some were clearly bad, we cannot notice the alleged error. It is well settled that a,n exception taken to a charge as a whole, or to a long series of instructions, which does not point out the particular error complained of, will not be of any avail in an appellate court, unless the charge as a whole, or the instructions as a whole, were erroneous. The same rule applies to an exception taken in gross to the refusal of a long-series of instructions. If some of them were clearly erroneous, and ought not to have been given, the trial court, on an exception to the refusal of all, will not be adjudged to have committed an error. Price v. Paukhurst, 10 U. S. App. 497, 3 C. C. A. 551, and 53 Fed. 312; Association v. Lyman, 18 U. S. Ápp. 507, 9 C. C. A. 104, and 60 Fed. 498; Railway Co. v. Spencer, 36 U. S. App. 229, 18 C. C. A. 114, and 71 Fed. 93.
Exceptions were taken, or at least an attempt was made to take exceptions, to some portions of the charge given by the trial court;