The appellant was sued by the Coppes, Zook & Mutschler Company, appellee, and the other appellee, Hawks Furniture Company, was required to answer as garnishee.
The appellant questions for the first time, by assignment of error, ,the sufficiency of the complaint, and also assigns as error the overruling of the appellant’s motion for a new trial.
The complaint against the appellant showed that the plaintiff and the appellant entered into a contract, May 22, 1902, which, it was alleged, was partly in writing and partly in oral terms. The three writings thus referred to were in substancekas follows: First, by a writing dated at Nappanee, Indiana, May 22, 1902, addressed to the appellant at New York, N. Y., signed by the plaintiff, and
Another writing of the same date, signed and accepted as was the- first one above mentioned, purported to be an order by the plaintiff to the appellant to ship to the plaintiff at Nappanee, by a specified railroad, 2,200 American Beauty mirrors, stating the prices and terms of payment, and stating the sizes and the number of each size; “to be shipped currently between June 1, 1902, and January 1, 1903.”
The other writing, of the same date and place, addressed to the plaintiff, and signed by H. O. Feckheimer for the appellant, was as follows: “Referring to your order for 2,200 American Beauty plates, placed with Semon Bache & Go. through me to-day, I agree, and it should be so understood between us, that none of said orders are to be shipped, except as may be specified and ordered by you from time to time, as your requirements may demand same.”
In People v. Lee Wah (1886),
In National Furnace Co. v. Keystone Mfg. Co. (1884),
In Burgess, etc., Fibre Co. v. Broomfield (1902),
The contract evidenced by the first writing, as we have seen, provided that the goods to which it related were to be taken currently as specified on order between July 1, 1902, and up to January 1, 1903; and the goods referred to in the second writing were to be shipped currently between June 1, 1902, and up to January 1, 1903, as might be specified and ordered by the plaintiff from time to time, as the plaintiff’s requirements might demand them. The first order for the shipment of plates was given October 8, 1902. It was not improper thus to permit the introduction of oral evidence showing the situation of the plaintiff,
Judgment affirmed.
