21 S.D. 639 | S.D. | 1908
This action was to recover a balance of $108.04 alleged to be due on the purchase price of two car loads of wheat, and the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain a verdict in favor of respondent for the full amount claimed is the principal point to be determined on this appeal from an order denying" appellant’s motion for a new trial.
Both parties to the action are dealers in grain, and in the spring of 1905 appellant purchased the two car loads of wheat at respondent’s elevator in the town of Zeeland, N. D., -to be shipped to Britton, in this state, where it was afterwards sold to farmers for the purpose of seeding. There being no controversy as to car No. 15152, or the amount of wheat contained therein, it was not prejudicial to permit respondent, after resting his case, to prove the net weight of the wheat loaded into that car, and there is no merit in the contention that a reversal must follow because such testimony did not tend to rebut, deny, or'explain anything put in evidence by appellant. It is within judicial discretion to allow witnesses to be called in rebuttal whose testimony is in support of that given in chief, and the practice is so uniformly sanctioned that the citation of supporting authority is deemed unnecessary. Apparently by inadvertence, the wheat shipped in the other car, being No. 64510, was not weighed at the time of loading, but by direction of respondent it was weighed at Aberdeen while in transit from Zeeland to Britton, and the testimony of the weigher, Charles Leidtke, with reference to the matter is as follows: “I reside at Aberdeen. Am the weighmaster for the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Company at Aberdeen. My duties are to make up trains, switch and weigh cars that should be weighed. In the-month of March, 1905,1 weighed a car of wheat shipped from Zeeland to Brit-ton, car No. 64510. The clerk in the office made the record. I did not examine those weights afterward to know whether they were correctly recorded. I have a record of these weights kept in a book for the purpose. The entry in the record is marked, ‘Car 64510 weighed bulk weight, shipped from Zeeland to Britton, 92,600 pounds tare 28,600, • net 64,000 pounds.’ That record is correct. * * * Gross weight is the car and its contents. Tare weight is the weight of the car when empty. Net
'Upon the"law and the facts, it must be held thaf the verdict is sufficiently sustained, and the order denying á new trial is affirmed.