15 Minn. 501 | Minn. | 1870
By the Court The plaintiffs in their complaint, after averring their partnership, alleged that at divers times between the 16th of September, 1868, and the 18th of October, 1863, at Jamestown, N. Y., they sold and delivered to the defendant, divers goods, wares and merchandise at divers prices, such prices amounting in all to one thousand and sixty dollars, which sum defendant in consideration thereof, agreed to pay plaintiffs, and allege certain payments thereon by the defendant. And for a
The answer of defendant puts in issue the allegations of the complaint, and sets up an agreement between the plaintiffs and defendant, made about Feb. 23d, 1863, by which the defendant became and was during all the time mentioned in the complaint, the general and exclusive agent of the plaintiffs for the care and sale in the state of Minnesota of wood mills made by said firm, and by which the plaintiffs agreed to furnish, ship and deliver to him, at and from Erie, Pennsylvania, their wood mills, all entire, complete and in working order, with all the parts and appurtenances thereof, as many as the defendant should order, and as soon as the lake should open in the year 1863, which actually was the 15th of May, 1863 ; and by which it was agreed, that the defendant should receive the same as such agent of said firm, and should pay them therefor after said wood mills were all sold by him for them as such agent, and not before, $55 each, for their iron post wood mills, and for their wood post mills, $15 each.
The answer further states, that on the 3d of March, 1863, the defendant as such agent, ordered from' said firm, twenty mills, ten of each of the kinds aforesaid. That plaintiffs actually sent fifteen of the iron post and five of the wood post mills, but did not deliver them at the time provided, nor till Nov. 5th, 1863, and never furnished them entire, complete and in working order, but neglected to furnish ten of the saws belonging to and forming part thereof; that defendant was compelled to and did furnish from Chicago, Illinois, the other saws therefor, to make said mills com
The answer sets up further, as a counter claim, the sum of $150, paid by defendant for castings which were defective, and portions of such.machines which were wanting, in order to put the mills in proper order, and {make them salable, for the use and benefit of the said firm.
The reply puts in issue all the new matter in the answer.
The cause was tried by a jury and resulted in a verdict for plaintiffs of $1275.75. The first point made by the appellant is, that the court' below erred in overruling the defendant’s objections to the answer of the witness, Adam J. Steele, to the third and fourth interrogatories put to him, and in receiving the answers contained in the deposition of said witness in evidence. Proof that these goods were sold to the defendant was vital to the plaintiffs’ case. In the answer to the third interrogatory the witness states, that the
In answer to the first and second cross interrogatories to this action, it appears that he never saw the defendant Etheridge, at any time or place. In answer to the fourth cross interrogatory he says, “I sold and delivered to said defendant, the goods, wares and merchandize mentioned in the foregoing interrogatories, in the year 1863 and 1864; I did the shipping personally; I do not testify from hearsay in answering the above direct interrogatories, or any of them, except it be the purchase and directions for shipment were by letter or letters, to said Steele, Sprague & Co., from defendant, and the same letters mentioned in the last direct intei’rogatory.”
Ve think the fair construction of the portion of the answer to the fourth cross interrogatory above quoted, taken in connection with the portion of the auswer to the sixth direct interrogatory above quoted, is that the purchase and directions for shipment of the goods were made by letters
The letters, therefore, were, in the first instance, the only competent evidence of the sale of the goods, and the testimony of the witness was incompetent to establish the fact.
Assuming that all the letters were put in evidence, subsequently, but a small portion of them were offered by the plaintiffs, and throughout the trial the plaintiffs proceeded upon the theory of proving the sale by oral evidence, and upon this theory, it seems, the case' was submitted to the .pry.
We do not feel called upon, under such circumstances, to examine the written evidence to ascertain whether the letters established a contract of sale or of agency. It is sufficient that the only competent proof of the contract was the letters; and that oral evidence upon the subject was permitted to go to the jury for their consideration, which, at least, we are not able to say was without influence upon the jury. Although the objection to the third interrogatory may be too general, in embracing the whole of the answer, a portion of which was competent testimony, the objection to the fourth interrogatory is specific, and limited to that portion of the answer which refers to a sale of the mills to the-defendant. This objection should have been sustained ■and the testimony excluded, and the error in receiving it is ground for a new trial.
In the course of the defense, the defendant Etheridge having been sworn as a witness, and having identified certain letters which were introduced in evidence, and being still upon the stand, the defendant offered to prove by the witness in connection with correspondence between the plaintiffs and defendant:
2. The allegations in the answer, and each of the same, relating to the damages sustained by said defendant, under such contract, by reason of the breach.of such contract on the part of the plaintiffs in not shipping said mills at the time and as agreed in said contract, set up as a counter claim and recoupment in said answer, as therein alleged.
8. The allegations of the answer relating to damages •sustained by said defendant, under said contract, by reason of the breach of said contract on the part of the plaintiffs in not shipping said mills all complete as agreed in said contract, set up as a eounter claim in said answer.
4. Each and every allegation of the answer relating to the damages of said defendant, by reason of the breaches of said contract on the part of said plaintiffs, set up in said answer as a counter claim and recoupment, and each and every item of the same as therein alleged: which offers were made separately, and the plaintiffs objected to the same, and each of them, as incompetent and immaterial. The court sustained the objections, and refused to receive said testimony ; to which ruling the defendant excepted.
Before the offers had been made, the defendant had testified that the agreement in regard to the mills had been made by letter, and had offered in evidence all the letters. So far, therefore, as the first of the offers enumerated above and rejected, is concerned, it must be regarded as an offer to prove the contract as a basis for the counter-claim set up in the answer, and not as a mere defense to the action. The correctness of the rulings as to all these offers, depends on the question whether the matter is properly the subject of a counter claim to the plaintiffs’ cause of action, and whether the answer contains facts sufficient to constitute a counterclaim.
The defendant claims, that the delivery of the property is the same relied on by plaintiffs, but that by the terms of the agreement under which it was made, it was not a sale, but was a contract of agency, and, sets forth the terms of it, and alleges certain breaches by the plaintiffs of certain conditions obligatory upon them, whereby he has suffered damages which are set forth. The transaction is certainly the same in fact; the rights and obligations arising out of the transaction are in dispute. We think, under our statute, the subject matter of the answer, so far as the nature or character of it is concerned, is a proper ground of counter claim. Koempel vs. Shaw, 13 Minn. 188; Folsom vs. Carli, 6 Minn. 120; Thompson vs. Kessel, 30 N. Y. 383. But the agreement of agency, aB stated in the answer, is that the defendant was to pay for the mills “ after they were all sold by him, for them, as such agent, and not before, $55 each, for their iron post wood mills, and for their wood post mills, $15 each;” and the answer distinctly avers that the defendant has fully performed his part of the contract, and “that one of said wood mills still remains and'is unsold, and on hand, and the property of said firm, without any fault of
It is manifest, under this state of the pleadings, that no accounting can be had by which the amount of any claim of the plaintiffs can be ascertained, against which the damages of the defendant can be set off, and the balance, if any, to which either party is entitled, ascertained. The proofs proposed, therefore, were properly rejected.
The third point raised by the defendant cannot be sustained. The record shows, that the verdict of the jury was recorded before the motion to poll the jury was made.
We cannot go behind the record. The affidavits were not competent, under the circumstances, for the purpose for which they were offered. In a proper case for a sealed verdict, the rights of the parties to poll the jury are not affected by an agreement that the jury may seal their verdict; but where the verdict is recorded, the right to poll the jury is gone.
The polling of the jury after the verdict was recorded, was of-no effect, and although upon such polling one of the jurors expressed his dissent from the verdict as previously rendered and recorded, it must bo disregarded. On the grounds above stated, however, the order denying a new trial is reversed.