This is an appeal from a judgment and an order denying a new trial. The case was tried to a jury, and a verdict for defendants directed by the court. Among the errors assigned is the insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict. It is probable, as urged by respondents, that this assignment is not sufficiently supplemented with the specification of the particulars in which the evidence is claimed to be insufficient to justify this court in examining the question as one of fact; but, the trial court having disposed of the case as one of law, the question here is not whether the verdict is sustainable as a conclusion of fact, but whether the court was right in treating the case as presenting no question of fact, and so deciding it as a question of law. Mercantile Co. v. Faris (S. D.) 60 N. W. 403. The direction by the court of a verdict for defendants, if error at all, was error , at law, and was properly and sufficiently specified as such in the statement upon which the motion for new trial was made. Donahue v. Gallavin, 43 Cal. 573. The question before us, then, is, does the abstract present evidence which, if believed by the jury, would permit a verdict for the plaintiff? We say “permit,” for if the evidence was such that the jury might have found for the plaintiff, the case should not have been taken away from them, and decided as a question of law. Plaintiff’s cause of action, as stated in its complaint, was that defendants, conspiring together, fraudulently induced the plaintiff to transfer to them a valuable horse, of the value of $700, for $100 in money and two promissory notes amounting to $525, against a third party, which notes the •defendants fraudulently represented to be good and collectable; that the maker of the notes was solvent, and able to pay, and' that the notes were secured by ample chattel mortgage security, — all of which was false, but was believed and relied upon by plaintiff; that upon discovery of the fraud plaintiff offered to return the money and the notes, and demanded the horse, which defendants refused. Benn did not answer. The answer
Sioux Banking Co. v. Kendall
6 S.D. 543 | S.D. | 1895
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