19 W. Va. 352 | W. Va. | 1882
announced the opinion of the Court:
In June, 1875, at rules in the circuit court of Kanawha county the plaintiff, Mark G. Sayre, filed his declaration in assumpsit against the defendant, W. H. Edwards. The declaration contains the common counts, also a special count. The special count in substance is, that the plaintiff on the 27th day of April, 18.6,7, purchased from one Smith two tracts QÍ
To the declaration and each count the defendant demurred, which demurrer the court overruled, and the defendant pleaded non-assumpsit.
The case was tried by a jury; and a verdict was rendered for the plaintiff for $268.00 principal and interest; which verdict the defendant moved the court to set aside. The motion was overruled; and judgment was entered upon the verdict. Two bills of exceptions were signed by the court. The first sets out all the evidence; and the exception is to the rulings of the court in admitting in evidence a deed from Nathan Smith to the plaintiff, Sayre, and a deed from W. W. Edwards and others to the plaintiff and to the reading of the depositions of Sayre, Kimberley and Fenimore, and to the admission of the certified copy of the verdict and judgment in the circuit court of Mason county in the case of W. W. Edwards, &c. v. Greenlee et als., and in overruling the motion
The plaintiff in error here insists, that the court erred in overruling the demurrer to the declaration, because first, the promise, which is the gist of the action, is not positively alleged in the special count, but only recited. This question has, as far as a declaration in assumpsit is concerned, been expressly decided by this Court. In Burton & Co. v. Hansford et al., 10 W. Va. 470, it was held, that it is a general rule in pleading, that whatever facts are necessary to constitute the cause of action must be distinctly and plainly stated in the declaration ; but a general indebitatus assumpsit count in a declaration, concluding “ and whereas defendants afterwards, to wit, on the day and year aforesaid, in consideration of the premises, then and there promised to pay, &c.,” was good on general demurrer. For the reasons stated in that case there being the same recital in the declaration here, as is there quoted in the syllabus, in addition to the recital complained of as insufficient, “the said defendant before the payment of said sum promising and agreeing to and with the plaintiff to return and refund the same, and to be personally responsible and liable to the plaintiff therefor, &c.,” we think, that such objection is not fatal to the said special count.
It is also alleged as ground for demurrer to said special count, that the condition precedent, upon which the right to recover is predicated, as alleged, is uncertain, confused and impossible. It seems to me, that there is nothing in this objection. The condition precedent is the failure of the plaintiffs to recover in the ejectment suit in Mason county; and it seems to me, that that suit is described with sufficient certainty, as also the declaration, that the plaintiffs there failed to recover. It is alleged, that the court erred in admitting the copy of the verdict and judgment in the Mason county suit without requiring the whole record to be produced. All that is necessary in a case like this is to produce so much of the record, as is sufficient to establish the fact in question. White v. Clay’s ex’rs, 7 Leigh 68; Dickinson v. R. R. Co., 7 W. Va. 413-414. What was the fact in question here, as far as the record is concerned ? The pending of such a suit, as
It is further objected, that the record was inadmissible, because the declaration alleged, that the judgment in the Mason county suit was rendered on the 30th day of May, 1870, and the record produced showed, that it was rendered on the 31st day of May, 1870. There is nothing in this objection. The date was not material. The question was, whether such a judgment bad been rendered in such a suit, not when it was rendered. The judgment in the Mason county suit was not declared on. It is also objected, that the said record was inadmissible, because the declaration describes a judgment rendered against the defendant, Wm. H. Edwards, in a suit of the Devisees of Josiah Edwards v. Neely Greenlee et al., while the judgment offered in evidence is in a suit of W. H. Edwards v. Neely Greenlee et al. This statement is incorrect. The declaration alleges, that W. H. Edwards was attorney in fact for the devisees of Jonas Edwards, and that he in the name of said devisees instituted a suit in the circuit court of Mason county against Neely Greenlee et al., involving the title to the said land and for the recovery of the same. The title of the case in the copy of the judgment objected to is W. H. Edwards, &c., v. Neely Geeenlee &c. It is evident to my mind, that it is the same case described in the declaration, and the copy was properly admitted.
It is also insisted, that the court erred in permitting the depositions of the plaintiffs Kimberley and Fenimore to be read to the jury. I see no objection to the admission, as the depositions tend to prove the contract set up in the declaration. This question will be further considered when we discuss the instructions. It is also claimed, that the court erred in admitting in evidence the deeds before referred to. I can see no objection to this admission. They tend to corroborate the verbal testimony of the plaintiff and show his motive for making the contract with Edwards, which he claims he made.
The second instruction is: “If the jury believe from the evidence, that the contract or promise set out in the special count in the declaration, in which it is alleged, that the defendant agreed to refund the $150.00 in the event the ejectment-suit of Edwards et al. v. Greenlee et al., was decided against plaintiffs in said suit, and that said contract or promise was a separate, distinct and independent contract; and if they further believe, that said suit was decided against the plaintiff, and judgment was rendered in said suit for the defendants before the institution of this suit, and the money paid upon said contract, in said event the jury should find for the plaintiff.” I can see no objection to this instruction under the proof in this case. If it was the separate individual contract of Edwards to pay back the money in a certain event, and upon such contract or promise the money was paid to him, and the event or contingency afterwards happened, I see no reason, why the money should not be refunded.
The third instruction is, that “if the jury believe from the evidence, that the contract alleged iu the special count in the declaration contained was a separate, independent and distinct contract between plaintiff and defendant in this suit from that contained in the documentary evidence, then such documentary evidence should have no effect as evidence in this action.” The documentary evidence referred to in the instruction is the contract made by W. H. Edwards as attorney in fact of the devisees of Jonas Edwards on the 27th day of April, 1867, for the consideration of $150.00 to be paid on the 1st day of May, 1867,'to convey certain land therein Specified, and the deed made with a condition, that if the money was not paid on that day, the contract was void on the said 1st day of May, 1867. The proof shows, that before the
The first instruction refused is as follows: “If the jury believe from the evidence, that the defendant did promise to refund the money paid by plaintiff to him for the purchase.of the land mentioned in the declaration, and to become personally liable therefor, in case the suit in ejectment mentioned in the declaration should be decided against the devisees of Jonas Edwards; and if the jury further believe from the evidence, that said promise was not made until after the execution and delivery of the agreement between the plaintiff and the devi-sees of Jonas Edwards of April 27, 1867, read in evidence, then there was no consideration for such promise, and the jury should find for the defendant.” An agent is personally liable, where he pledges his own liability. 1 Par. Con. 14 and cases cited; Story’s Agency § 269. It was competent for Edwards in order to induce Sayre on the 1st day of May, 1867, to pay the $150.00 and take the deed, to make a personal contract in his own name to pay back the money, in the event it turned out, that the devisees of Jonas Edwards had no title to the land; and it cannot be said, that there was no consideration for such a promise. Savre had not paid the money, and would not pay it until the inducement of repayment in a certain
The second instruction refused was: “Under the circumstances supposed in the first instruction the promise was to pay the debt of another and within the statute of frauds not being in writing/’ This is incorrect, because it was not to pay the debt of another, but to pay an obligation, which he had individually assumed, that is, to pay his own debt.
The third instruction refused is substantially the same as the first, and was properly refused for reasons already stated.
The only remaining question is: Did the court err in refusing to set aside the verdict and grant a new trial.? We think not. The verdict was fully sustained by the evidence.
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed with costs and damages according to law.
Judges HaymoND ahd Green CoNcurred, except that Judge Green was of opinion, that the judgment in the ejectment suit was on its face too indefinite to identify it as the judgment mentioned in the declaration, and it ought therefore to have been excluded from the jury.
Judgment Aepirmed.