104 P. 545 | Mont. | 1909
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action to recover damages for the breach of a contract. In 1899 this plaintiff and J. A. Talbot had a lease upon the Silver King quartz lode mining claim, situated in Silver Bow county, and owned by the defendants Murray, King, and Daly. During the term of such lease J. H. Maloney and others, the owners of the Plymouth claim, which adjoins the Silver King claim, brought an action against Sutton, Talbot, Murray, King and Daly to restrain them from removing the minerals from certain veins claimed to belong to the Plymouth property, and to recover damages for ores already removed from the disputed territory. The complaint in this action, after setting forth these facts at greater length, then alleges that upon the commencement of the Plymouth-Silver King litigation, Murray, King, and Daly employed the plaintiff, Sutton, to prepare the defense in said action, by doing such development work as might be necessary, and by procuring witnesses to testify to the facts shown by such development work, and generally to take charge of the defense in said action and the preparation of that case, and any other eases which might arise in connection with the same subject matter, for Murray, King and Daly,
The answers consisted of general denials and other matters by way of defense. The defendant King set forth certain counterclaims for money loaned by him to plaintiff, and all but one of these counterclaims, so far as they relate to money loaned, are admitted in the reply. Upon the trial the jury returned the following verdict: “We, the jury in the above-entitled cause, find our verdict herein in favor of the defendants and against the plaintiff, upon the cause of action set forth in plaintiff’s complaint; and we further find in favor of Silas F. King, upon the counterclaim set forth in his separate answer, and against the said plaintiff, for the sum of no dollars.” Upon this verdict a judgment was rendered and entered in favor of defendants Murray, King, and Daly for their costs. The plaintiff
At the outset we are met with a question of practice urged by respondent as follows: “The motion for a new trial was made upon the minutes of the- court. The record does not contain the minutes of the court, nor does it contain anything which purports to be a complete record, including the minutes of the court, and the appeal for that reason should be dismissed”—and Sanden v. Northern Pacific Ry. Co., ante, p. 209, 102 Pac. 145, is cited in support of this contention. In the Sanden Case the motion for new trial was made upon the minutes of the court and a bill of exceptions. In the record on appeal the minutes of the court were not presented, and we therefore held that, in the absence of such minutes, we could not say that the order granting the new trial was not properly made. But the same condition does not prevail in this present appeal. This record contains the judgment-roll, a statement of the case, and copies of the affidavits used, of the notice of intention to move for a new trial, plaintiff’s bill of exceptions, the order appealed from, and the notice of appeal. Sections 6799 and 7114, Revised Codes, provide that upon an appeal from an order granting a new trial, wherein the motion is made upon the minutes of the court, the record on appeal shall consist of the papers just enumerated above, as contained in this record. The trial court, in settling this statement of the ease, certifies that it is true and correct; and since the only office of a state
It is also suggested by respondent that the verdict is inconsistent with the admitted facts, and this is true. The pleadings admit an indebtedness on the part of plaintiff to defendant King, and yet the verdict does not find in King’s favor for any amount. But this is not a matter of which respondent Sutton can complain. If the finding of the jury that King is not' entitled to recover on his counterclaims amounts to anything, it is a finding in Sutton’s favor, of which he cannot complain, and which he could1 not urge in the trial court in support of his motion for a new trial.
It was also urged by respondent that the trial court ought to have - considered the affidavits presented in support of his motion for new trial, and ought to have granted a new trial upon the ground of misconduct of the jury, or, speaking more accurately, misconduct of jurors Doney and Bonning. The affidavit oí plaintiff, Sutton, sets forth only matters of hearsay or matters on information and belief, and was incompetent for the purpose offered. (People v. Findley, 132 Cal. 301, 64 Pac. 472; Gay v. Torrance, 145 Cal. 144, 78 Pac. 540.)
The affidavits of Fred Henderson and Dr. Witherspoon recite the fact that the juror Doney had certain amounts of money immediately succeeding the trial of this case, but each affiant disclaims any knowledge of the source from which such money was received. The record of certain contempt proceedings against Juror Doney was wholly immaterial. It relates to a matter which happened subsequent to, and not in any manner connected with, the trial of this case.
One of the affidavits presented is by Henry Olsen, a juror who sat in the trial of this case. It relates to a conversation had with the juror Doney, and tends to show misconduct on the part of Doney in deciding this case. Our Code provides, in subdivision 2 of section 6794, that the affidavits of jurors may be used to impeach a verdict when the verdict was reached by
The affidavit of the plaintiff also alleges that one of the jurors, Charles Ronning, who sat in the trial of this case, and who, upon the jury being polled, announced that he concurred in the verdict returned, was a pumpman employed in one of the mines in Butte; that the juror continued his work at the mine every night during the progress of the trial of this case, and by reason of this fact was “not in a position or condition to give to the trial of the case the full and deliberate consideration to which a litigant is entitled from a juryman.” But the affidavit does not anywhere state when plaintiff or his attorneys first became aware of this irregularity or misconduct of the juryman, if his conduct may be given either designation. If, as a matter of fact, the plaintiff or his attorneys knew of the conduct of this juryman during the progress of the trial, plaintiff cannot now complain, for a litigant may not, with such knowledge, proceed with the trial under the hope or expectation that the offending juryman may be favorable to his cause, and then complain if he is not. A party is not permitted to thus speculate upon the chances of a verdict.' In 1 Spelling on New Trial and Appellate Procedure, section 149, the rule is thus announced: “The general rule, often stated, that a remedy for any act or episode endangering the fairness of a trial must be sought and applied at the earliest practical moment by the party complaining, or having a right to complain, is applicable to all kinds and grades of misconduct of the jury.
For the reasons stated, the trial court properly disregarded these affidavits on the hearing of the motion for new trial.
We are not able to discover any other possible ground of the motion upon which the court could have granted a new trial, except insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict. The burden of proof was upon the plaintiff, and the verdict returned was in favor of the defendants. The entire controversy hung upon a solution of the question, Was the contract upon which plaintiff relies ever in fact made? The verdict answered this inquiry in the negative. The plaintiff claims that he made the agreement with Murray, and that King was aware of and acquiesced in it. Murray and King each testified positively that such a contract was not made or acquiesced in by him, and numerous facts and circumstances introduced seem strongly to support their contention. The jury believed their testimony, and the question of their credibility was addressed primarily to the jury. So long as the jury is a part of our judicial system, the verdict in an action at law ought not to be set aside, except for the most cogent reasons; otherwise the constitutional guaranty of a right.to trial by jury becomes a mere idle phrase—high-sounding, but without any potency whatever.
Our conclusion is that the complaint does not state a cause of action on the contract for money expended, or for the value of plaintiff’s time.
A consideration of the remaining question, relating to the defendants’ failure to give the lease, discloses the weakness of plaintiff’s entire case upon the evidence. The plaintiff alone testifies to the fact that a contract was made by the defendants and himself, relative to his employment to take charge of the defense in the Plymouth-Silver King litigation and the facts and circumstances surrounding the making of it. While he is very positive that a contract was made, his testimony as to the terms and conditions of the agreement is so vague and indefinite, and, when his cross-examination is considered with his testimony given on direct examination, there appear so many contradictions or irreconcilable statements, that we are of the opinion that a verdict in his favor, based upon his entire testimony, would have to be set aside for insufficiency of the evidence to support it. The verdict returned, seems to us to be the only one which could have been reached upon the evidence in the case, eliminating the question of King’s right to recover on his counterclaims; and, this being so, the court abused its discretion
Reversed.