145 N.W. 559 | S.D. | 1914
The complaint alleges “that on or about March 4, 1911, defendant requested- this plaintiff to deliver to one J. E. Sturgeon,, all the goods, groceries, and merchandise that the said Sturgeon should wish and need, from time to time, and that the defendant promised to pay for all goods so delivered to the said Sturgeonthat in consideration of defendant’s promise, ' plaintiff delivered to said Sturgeon, between January 6, 1911, and' October 13, 1911, goods, groceries, and merchandise amounting to the sum of $308.16, and that defendant has refused to -pay there
Sturgeon lived on a farm owned by Whipple, who was his brother-in-law. He had traded, at plaintiff’s store during the years 1910 and 1911, and until plaintiff refused him further credit. Win. F. Sprick, president and manager of plaintiff corporation, testified that about March 11, 1911, defendant was in the store, and was told by him that credit could no. longer be extended to Sturgeon; that thereupon Whipple .asked the amount of Sturgeon’s indebtedness, and, being shown the amount (about $40), said: “That is all right. I will .pay for that, and you furnish them with what goods' he wishes until another crop comes on, and charge me with it, but don’t let Sturgeon know, if you can help it, that I am standing good for this, because if he knew it, he would abuse the credit, and while he is my brother-in-law, it is hard for me to go after him for money, and I want you to assist me in getting this money back out of Sturgeon as much as you can, and keep it from him that this is charged to me.” Sprick further testified that between March 11 and October 13, 1911, $265 worth of goods were delivered to Sturgeon under this agreement. Henry D. Sprick, a stockholder and employee of the store, testified that he was present at the conversation referred to, and fully corroborated the testimony of Win. F. Sprick. On cross-examination, Wm. F. Sprick testified that the clerks in the store were not instructed to charge to defendant Whipple the merchandise delivered to Sturgeon; that, under the system used in the store, each clerk entered on a slip the goods s'old to. the purchaser, and the price; that the slips for the Sturgeon goods made by the clerks bore Sturgeon’s name, were kept under Sturgeon’-s name, and a duplicate of the slips given to Sturgeon. Sprick further -testified that under said agreement, he opened an account with Whipple for the g-oods delivered to Sturgeon, and himself copied the slips . made by the clerks and put the charge slips in Whipple’s account file, and that this was done from the time of the first delivery of goods to Sturgeon. Fie also testified that he had made efforts to collect this account from Sturgeon, asked for money and for security, but never received -either; that on October 11, 1911, he asked Whipple for -money on the Sturgeon account, -but that Whipple asked him to carry the account over until another crop.
Defendant’s motion for direction of a verdict was on the grounds: First, that from the evidence, it affirmatively appeared that the undertaking of the defendant, if any, was a guaranty within the statute of frauds, and that the same was net reduced to writing and signed by the defendant; that the evidence fails to disclose any consideration for the guaranty, particularly so far as the account prior to March 11, 1911, is concerned; second, ■that there was no evidence of the reasonable worth of the goods alleged to have been furnished, nor that they were furnished at an alleged -price, nor that the go-ods, to the amount charged, were delivered to the plaintiff.
In considering the further (question of -error in the •direction of a verdict for defendant, all conflict in ‘the testimony
This rule has been so- frequently announced by this court and so uniformly followed in other jurisdictions that a citation of authorities seems unnecessary. It is respondent’s contention that this case is within and is controlled by the decision of this court in Wood v. Dodge, 23 S. D. 95, 120 N. W. 774. In this we think respondent is in error. The law as announced in that case is clearly correct, an-d is sustained by text writers g-enerally, and especially 'by the decisions of courts in those jurisdictions having statutes like our own.
The question decisive of this appeal is whether the oral agreement, as testified to by plaintiff, under which the merchandise sued for, as delivered to Sturgeon, is to be deemed- an original obligation of the defendant, Whipple, or whether it amounts merely to a collateral agreement or promise on the part of Whipple to pay any indebtedness -of Sturgeon thereafter contracted for merchandise furnished to him.
The judgment and order of the trial court are reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.