157 P. 976 | Ariz. | 1916
This is an action upon an account for goods sold and delivered and money loaned to one Dionicio Duran by A. & B. Schuster, a corporation, and A. & B. •Schuster, a copartnership, the account of the copartnership having been assigned to the corporation which brought the •action. It is claimed that the goods sold and delivered and the money loaned to Duran was at the special instance and
The appellee claims, however, that this court may not consider the evidence because there was no motion for a new trial made in the lower court. This contention is not well founded. Section 1231, Rev. Stats. 1913. This is the only argument made in support of the judgment; it is not claimed by appellee that there is any substantial evidence whatever in the record tending to support the judgment. The cause was tried to the court sitting without a jury, and the judge has certified the reporter’s transcript to be correct. The said Duran has been engaged in the sheep business in Apache county for many years, and appears to have been trading with the A. & B. Schuster Company, a copartnership, for some twenty years last past. It is also disclosed that, during the time the account sued upon was run by Duran, he had rented a band of sheep from Rouillier for a period of five years on shares; the said Rouillier was living in New Mexico during this time. The agreement providing that Duran should pay all the expenses of running the sheep, including taxes, and to give as rental for the sheep two and one-half pounds of wool for each sheep each year, delivered at Holbrook, Arizona, during the month of June or July of each year, and at the end of five years to return to Rouillier 2,291 ewes and 2,141 lambs, the said Duran to have all of the sheep over that number. We have examined the record, and agree with the appellant there is no evidence fairly tending to support the judgment. In arriving at this conclusion this court is of course governed by the well-known rule that the supreme court will not weigh the evidence to determine whether or not it would have reached a different conclusion from that of the trial court, confining ourselves to ascertain only whether or not the judgment is reasonably supported or justified by any substantial evidence.
The judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded, with instructions to dismiss the action.
It is so ordered.
ROSS, O. J., and CUNNINGHAM, J., concur.