Reading v. Texas & Pacific Railway Co.

4 F. 134 | U.S. Cir. Ct. | 1880

McKennan, C. J.,

{orally.) The plaintiff here has circumscribed his case within very narrow limits. He has by his declaration bound himself to prove a promise between himself and the defendants, by which the latter agreed, in consideration of whatever he did in performance of his contract, to pay him the balance he now claims. He has been permitted to present his case to the jury in a double aspect -r-First, that his performance of his contract to obtain the signature of these parties to a paper to provide for the re*135organization of this railroad was acceptable to the defendants, and that so he was entitled to recover; and, secondly„ the ground that no matter how he performed his contract these matters were subsequently arranged between the parties, and a promise had been made to pay the ascertained balance of §6,000. As to the above grounds I was unable on the trial to see how the jury could find for the plaintiff. As to the first ground, the plaintiff was permitted to go into that, although under his declaration this was perhaps a mere matter of inducement. He was permitted, however, to show, if he could, performance of the contract. Now, it must be admitted that there was no actual performance of the contract proven. Taking all the evidence, I think the weight of it was against the plaintiff, and so presented it to the jury.

On the second point, as to the subsequent arrangement between the parties, the testimony of the plaintiff was not direct. He did not swear that there was an actual ascertainment of this balance. He merely says he understood it so. He does not testify to any unqualified promise. Under these circumstances, a verdict in favor of the defendants would have been satisfactory to the court. Now, the jury erroneously have found a verdict for a sum less than the plaintiff would have been entitled to recover if his case had been made out by satisfactory proof. But this is not prejudicial to the plaintiff. It does not do him any wrong. He has no right to complain. We do not sit hero to correct formal errors made by the jury that do not hurt any one. The parties who are injured by this verdict are the defendants, not the plaintiff. But the defendants do not move for a new trial. The jury might have found a verdict generally for the defendants, but because the jury have given the plaintiff what he is not entitled to, it certainly does not lie in the mouth of the plaintiff to allege any wrong, nor is it the duty of the court to set aside the verdict.

Motion refused.

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