after making the foregoing statement of the case: It appears that, after the pleadings had been read and the jury impaneled, ■defendant requested the court to order a reference of the case, which ■ was refused, and to this the first exception was taken. The motion for
It was competent for the plaintiff, while testifying in his own behalf, to state the quantity of goods sold by him, in order that it might be subsequently shown how many of them had been shipped under his contract and settlement of 27 July, 1911; and for a like reason it was not improper that he should be permitted to refer to section 4 of the complaint and answer to make his testimony intelligible. They were preliminary matters, and the ruling of the court did not make the sections, so referred to, evidence in the case. We see no objection to the same witness stating what he claimed was owing by the defendant, and his explaining the items. Nor was there any valid objection to his stating the items which defendants had wrongfully charged to him or debited him with on their books, as something had to be deducted from the amount they had promised to pay him. It was necessary that this should appear, in order to ascertain the correct balance. All this covers the second, third, fourth, fifth, and sixth exceptions. As to his being-allowed to state the amount of commissions on $103,000 at 2% per cent, if he had answered it, we cannot see what harm would have resulted to defendant; but his answer was not responsive to the question, and there is no exception to the answer, and therefore, on this ground, the seventh exception must fail. Caton v. Toler,
This brings us to the consideration of the question, and the pivotal one in the case, whether the settlement of 27 July, 1912, is binding upon defendant. "We cannot see why it is not. The parties had disagreed as to the balance,, if any, due the plaintiff under the contract, and for this reason they came to an accounting, for the purpose of settling the differences between them. This is a sufficient consideration to support the settlement and the agreements or covenants entered into as a part thereof.
In the recent case of Burris v. Starr,
Chief Justice Nash said further, in Mayo v. Gardner, supra: “The prevention of litigation is a valid and sufficient consideration; for the law favors the settlement of disputes. Thus, a submission of claims and demands to arbitration is binding, so far as this, that the mutual promises are a consideration, each for the other. 1 Parsons Contract, 364; Com. Dig., ‘Action on the case on Assumpsit,’ A 1, B 2. In Keson v. Barclay,
Tbe eighth and last exception is equally untenable. Tbe judge could not direct a verdict upon tbe evidence, as requested to do. It was for tbe jury to say what was tbe balance due tbe plaintiff.. There was evidence, we think, upon which they could have found a larger balance than tbe one indicated in defendant’s prayer. Anyhow, there was no ground for such a peremptory instruction, and, besides, defendant could not select a part of tbe evidence, and base a request for a charge upon that alone. It must be considered as a whole. It appears that all of tbe testimony was not stated in tbe record. But, in any view, tbe instruction would have been improper as invading tbe province of tbe jury.
After a careful examination of tbe entire case, we find no reason for complaint on tbe part of tbe defendant. Tbe verdict seems to have been a very moderate one, as we construe tbe evidence.
No error.
