13 Or. 172 | Or. | 1886
The respondent commenced an action against the appellant^ to recover a balance of $464.42 alleged to have been due from the appellants to one "William Stevens upon a sale of a tract of land to them by the said Stevens, and that the claim therefor had been assigned by the latter to the respondent. It appears from the pleadings in the action that the price of the land sold was $10,000; that the appellants were to pay said price by the transfer to the said Stevens of other real property, by assuming two mortgages upon the land conveyed to them, and the balance, being said $464.42, to be paid either to the said Stevens, or to a. firm in Vancouver known as Moore, Stevens, & Brother; the respondent claiming in his complaint that said balance was to be paid to Stevens; the appellants claiming in their answer that it was to be paid to the said Moore, Stevens, & Brother, and that they had duly paid it to the said firm. This is the only issue presented by the pleadings to the court below for trial. The respondent having, by his reply, denied the appellants’ allegations in their answer that said balance was to be paid to said firm, or that such payment had been made, or that said appellants were authorized or empowered by said William Stevens to pay Moore, Stevens, & Brother the same, the case was tried by said Circuit Court, and a jury duly impaneled, who returned a verdict in favor of the respondent for said balance, and upon which the judgment appealed from was entered. The appellants claimed, upon the trial in the court below, that this balance was to be paid by giving credit, upon the books of the firm of Moore, Stevens Brothers, & Co., to Moore,
Moore, Stevens, & Brother. Or.
By cash paid S. W. Brown, to apply on account...................$464 42'
The said entry was read to the jury. The appellants7, counsel then asked the witness, in substance, if, when he received money from any person, and gave such person credit therefor on the book in which the accounts were kept, and stated in such credit entry the name of the person to whom the money credited was paid, whether
The Circuit Court also instructed the jury that “the evidence introduced by the defendant tends to show that-the contract, if there was one, was that Brown and Kamm were to pay an indebtedness of Moore, Stevens, & Brother, or a portion of it, so far as this would pay it, to this mill company. That contract, if there was such a one, could not have been enforced by Moore, Stevens, & Brother-against Kamm and Brown, because it was not in writing;” to which the appellants’ counsel excepted. The said court further instructed the jury that “it was conceded that the contract was not in writing; but although it may have been avoided — that is, it may have been, such a contract as could not be enforced by Moore,.
The only issue made by the pleadings, as I have already suggested, is whether the appellants, by their con
The questions to the witness Snodgrass, as to how he regarded the form of entry made in the account-book, or what his understanding of the said entry of the $464.42 was, as to its being a charge to Brown for that sum, according to his system of book-keeping, were not, in my opinion, admissible. If it were necessary to show that the appellants had been charged with said balance upon the books of Moore, Stevens Brothers, & Co., it would have to be shown by affirmative evidence of that fact. The entry given in evidence might, if ambiguous, have been explained; but I do not think it could have been made to mean that some other act had been done which its language does not import. It cannot, it seems to me, be inferred from the entry that the appellants were charged with said sum, no matter how Mr. Snodgrass may have regarded the entry, or what his understanding regarding it may have been. Its language expresses no such fact, nor do I believe it could be so construed as to include it. I attach no importance to the questions, for I do not believe the case was determined by the jury upon any such questions. It was a part cancellation of the indebtedness, to say the least. If the contract, as to the payment of the balance, was as the appellants claimed, and if the jury had found that such was the contract, they would, under the instructions of the court upon that point, have found for the appellants.
The instruction asked for by the appellants’ counsel, that if the jury believed that Kamm and Brown understood, from the contract, that they were not to pay any part of the consideration in money, the respondent could not recover, was properly refused. The question was not what they understood: it was what they agreed to do. They obtained from Stevens the land, and were to pay
The instruction in regard to the statute of frauds has already been commented upon. Standing by itself, it is erroneous; but I am satisfied that the other part of the charge rendered the error harrhless. The circuit court submitted the issue fairly to the jury, although he wove into it a mistaken notion of the law. The court told the jury that, although the contract might have been avoided, yet if it had been fulfilled by the appellants, that would exonerate them from the payment to the respondent or Stevens, and of course the appellants could claim no benefit from the contract, as they alleged it to be, unless they had fulfilled it. I cannot see that the instruction could possibly have done the appellants any injury. I think it affirmatively appears from the record that it could not have injured them. The judgment will therefore he affirmed.
The chief justice did not sit in this case.