12 Wis. 1 | Wis. | 1860
By the Court,
It may be conceded that in strict law the plaintiff could not have recovered in this action against Bobbins alone, for any part of the debt which accrued against Tweed & Bobbins, all of which, it appears from the evidence, Bobbins assumed, and promised the plaintiff to pay, when he bought out the interest of Tweed. There are authorities sustaining his right to recover upon such a state of facts. But even if he could not, it clearly appears both from the pleadings and the evidence, that a much larger amount than the balance claimed, was the individual debt of Bobbins alone.
The allegation in the complaint, of the sale to the defendant of Massing's note, is not denied at all. The rendition of the services by the plaintiff’s wife, is not denied, but the answer avers that they were paid for in a particular manner, and to establish that, the burden of proof was on the defendant. It is evident therefore that the answer, so far, put in issue only the questions, whether the plaintiff was to have $400 or $800 per year for his services ; whether for half the time he worked for Tweed & Robbins; and whether the wife’s services had been paid for. Do the remaining allegations give it a different effect ? They relate to the sums averred in the complaint to have been paid out by the plaintiff for the use of the defendant. The first part of the answer denies that the plaintiff had laid out or expended any money for the defendant at his request, •“ except such sums as had been delivered by him to the plaintiff, while the plaintiff was in his employ, for that purpose.” This is clearly no denial that the plaintiff paid out the money, but on the contrary impliedly admits it. It avoids the liability, by averring that the money paid out, had been in fact furnished by the defendant for that purpose, and is like the answer in Hamilton vs. Hough, 13 How. Pr. R, 14, where the answer denied that the plaintiff had sold the defendant any goods that had not been paid for, which the Court held not to amount to a denial.
The latter part of the denial, avers that the defendant had no knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief, whether the plaintiff “had laid out and expended all the sums of money delivered by the defendant to the plaintiff for that purpose as aforesaid, and therefore had no knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief whether he was, or on a final accounting with the plaintiff, would be, indebted to the plaintiff in any sum whatever.” The latter part of this
And though this point was not made upon the argument, I have examined it the more closely by reason of the effect that a sufficient denial in this respect, would have had upon our conclusion as to the application of the payments, which latter point was. urged by the respondent’s counsel. Eor on the trial the evidence offered by the plaintiff to prove these items, was objected to, and excluded by the court. And it is very evident that if they are left out, even though all the other items sued for were fully established, the payments admitted by the complaint were more than enough to overbalance them; and therefore no such application of payments could have been made, as would leave any balance for the plaintiff. But, though it does not appear of record, it would seem that this evidence must have been excluded upon a mutual understanding that these items were for moneys which the plaintiff had paid out as agent of the defendant and the latter had furnished, and which the plaintiff had credited among the payments admitted in the complaint. Eor the whole contest after its exclusion, both in the court below and here, was upon the other items and the questions arising thereon, when, if this evidence was properly excluded, with the burden of proof on the plaintiff to establish those items, that was an end of the case. But we think this effect was not produced, for the reason that they were not sufficiently denied by the answer.
The only other question was as to the admissibility of the deposition. It was objected to, for the reason that it did not show any legal reason for taking it, the certificate stating only that the witness was going out of the state, but not that he would not return in time for the trial. We are inclined to think that under the strict rules prevailing as to the tak
Tbe judgment must be affirmed with costs.