55 Neb. 621 | Neb. | 1898
In January, 1892, Isaac Sylvester, of Ornaba, Nebraska, owned a printing outfit on which Marder, Luse & Co., of Chicago, held a chattel mortgage to secure a debt owing to them by Sylvester. At said time there existed in Omaha a corporation known as the Carpenter Paper Company. January 16, in said year, Sylvester, the Carpenter Paper Company, and Harder, Luse & Co. signed an agreement in writing, in words and figures as follows: “This memorandum of mutual agreement, made between Isaac Sylvester, of Omaha, Douglas county, Nebraska, and Marder, Luse & Co., an incorporation, of Chicago, Cook county, Illinois, parties of the first part, and the Carpenter Paper Company, an incorporation of Omaha, Douglas county, Nebraska, party of the second part, witnesseth: The said parties of the first part, for and in consideration of one dollar, in hand paid, and the covenants and agreements of the second party, hereafter mentioned, hereby agree to lease to the said party of the second part all of the printing machinery, and material, engine, shafting, belting, office furniture, and fixtures,
1. The evidence shows without conflict that about February 1, 1892, the Carpenter Paper Company, in pursuance of the writing of January 16, 1892, took possession of the printing outfit and remained in possession thereof until this suit was brought, during all of which time it made the monthly payments promised to Marder, Luse & Co. There is no eAddence in the record that at the time this suit whs brought the debt of Sylvester to Marder, Luse & Co. had been discharged; nor is there any evidence in the record which sIioavs, or tends to show, that Sylvester, at the time this suit was brought, was entitled to the possession of the property in controversy here if the writings of January 16 and 22 constitute the contracts between the parties.
2. On the trial of the case Sylvester offered to prove that in the early part of January, 1892, and prior to the making of these Avritings, the paper company proposed to him to employ him, together with his printing outfit,
The exclusion by the court of this offer of proof is the principal argument relied upon here for a reversal of the judgment under review. We do not think the court erred in excluding the offer. There is no claim made by Sylvester in this case, by pleading or otherwise, that the contracts of January 16 and 22, or either of them, are the result of fraud or mistake upon the part of any one. His contention is that one contract existed between himself and Harder, Luse & Co. on the one side, and the Carpenter Paper Company upon the other, by the terms of which it employed him for a given time at a given salary, he to furnish tools and appliances — namely, the planting outfit — with which to do the work for which he Avas em
Counsel for plaintiff in error, in support of his contention that the district court erred in refusing to receive the testimony offered, cite us to Norman v. Waite, 30 Neb. 302, and to Barnett v. Pratt, 37 Neb. 349. Neither of these cases is an authority for the contention urged here. The Norman Case was a suit upon a promissory note in the hands of one not an innocent purchaser thereof, and the defense was that the note had been procured from the maker by a false and fraudulent representation, and that there was, therefore, no consideration for the note. In the Pratt Case no oral evidence was offered or received to contradict or vary a written agreement, as the writing-in that case was a mere receipt for money. The judgment of the district court is
AFFIRMED.