44 Minn. 388 | Minn. | 1890
1. There is absolutely nothing in appellant’s assignment of error which relates to the language of the trial court as to what the verdict should be, made as the beginning of its charge to the jury, while erroneously supposing that the cause was to be submitted without argument by “Counsel. The sentence was not completed when attention was called to the mistake, and if it were possible for the few words, inadvertently uttered, to have made an impression on the mind of any of the jurors, such impression must have been wholly removed by the statement immediately made by the court. The charge, when finally given, was also plain and unambiguous upon the point now complained of. It may also be observed that no exception was taken to the remark which appellant-now insists greatly prejudiced his case.
2. Upon the pleadings and the testimony, the principal, if not the only, question to be considered and determined by the jury was as to which of these parties gave a correct version of the transaction which led to this litigation. The defendant testified that plaintiff was advised that the note of Ickler and Benedict was to be taken in payment for the interest in the real property then held and owned by these parties and one Lambert; that the note would have to be-indorsed by each, in order to realize any money from the sale; that the excess — the note being for an amount greater than the sum for
■ In conclusion, it may also be noticed that defendant admitted in his testimony that there was an agreement between the parties that the proceeds of the sale should be proportionately divided at once, and that each was to be liable and responsible for his share of what might have to be paid in the future to one Decker.
Order affirmed.