188 Iowa 952 | Iowa | 1920
At the time of the transactions under consideration, the plaintiff was a plumber, engaged in business for many years in the city of Des Moines. The defendant was a corporation, organized for the purpose of acquiring a long-time lease on a certain city property on Second Street and Grand Avenue in Des Moines. For the purpose of improving such property, so as to increase the rental value thereof, it constructed thereon 14 store fronts. Plaintiff
Two errors are assigned by appellant as grounds of reversal, and we proceed to their consideration.
I. The first error relates to the admissibility in evidence of plaintiff’s books of account.
Section 4623, Code, 1897, is as follows:
“Sec. 4623. Books of account containing charges by one party against the other, made ;in the ordinary course of business, are receivable in evidence only under the following circumstances, subject to all just exceptions as to their credibility :
“1. They must show a continuous dealing with persons generally, or several items of charge at different times against the other party in the same book or set of books;
“2. It must be shown by the party’s oath, or otherwise, that they are his books of original entries;
“3. It must be shown in like manner that the charges were made at or near the time of the transactions therein
“4. The charges must also be verified by the party or clerk, who made the entries, to the effect that they believe' them just and true, or a sufficient reason must be given why such verification is not made.”
All the requirements of this statute were substantially met in the showing, unless it be that the existence of the slips and the memoranda thereon, impeached or supplanted the account book as a book of original entries. The argument for appellant is that the memorandum slips were the original entries, and that, therefore, there could be no subsequent original entries. Whether these memoranda constituted the original entries, within the meaning of the statute, depends, in part, upon whether they wére intended as such by the plaintiff, when mad.e. An original entry, within the meaning of the statute, is one which is intended, when made, to be the permanent evidence of the charge.. If no memoranda had been made upon the slips, would the plaintiff’s books be better evidence than they are? Appellant’s argument would make them such. If the slips and the memoranda thereon were, at the time of their use, intended only as a temporary aid to the entering of the charges upon the book of original entries, they cannot be deemed thereby to supplant the book as one of original entries, nor to impair its credibility; provided, of course, that the entries in the book were made at or near the time of the transactions, and by one who had actual knowledge and memory of the transaction, at the time of the entry.
It will be noted, also, that Section 4623 has reference to entries of “charges.” No prices were entered and no “charges” actually made upon the memorandum slips. The statute also purports to deal, not with mere “original entries,” but with “books of original entries.” True, we have held that slips containing original entries may be deemed books
That the memoranda involved in this case were intended as mere temporary aid in the making of a multitude of entries upon the book of original entries, is sufficiently shown. We hold, therefore, that the book was admissible, as one of original entries. Its credibility-is not otherwise assailed. Nor are the items appearing therein in any manner contradicted. The items are all of such a nature that, if untrue, they were subject to contradiction by mere observation upon the job. Any experienced plumber could invoice the items of material entering into the job done by the plaintiff1.
II. The second error complained of is directed to Instruction No. 2, given by the court to the jury. This was as follows:
It will be noted from a perusal of the foregoing that the court lifted the burden of proof from the plaintiff to prove his account. If the jury should find that he had agreed upon a maximum cost of $1,000, in that event the jury was instructed to return a verdict for him for $300. This is the feature of the instruction complained of. It was manifestly erroneous. Tt was doubtless predicated upon a misconception of defendant’s pleading.
What prejudice could the defendant have suffered therefrom? If the jury had found that the plaintiff did limit his charges to a maximum cost of $1,000, and had returned a verdict for. the plaintiff for $300, the defendant would have been in a position to complain of this instruction.
The total cost of the job, as pleaded by plaintiff, and as his evidence tended to prove, was $2,147, with $700 paid thereon. In the first instruction, the court laid upon the plaintiff the full bui'den of proof as to the entire account. The jury returned a verdict for $1,447. They necessarily found that there was no agreement by plaintiff for a maximum cost of $1,000. Such finding eliminated entirely the hypothesis upon which the jury was directed, hy Instruction No. 2, to return a verdict, for $300. The error was. therefore, clearly without prejudice. No other errors are presented for our consideration. The judgment below is, accordingly, — Affirmed.