6 Utah 439 | Utah | 1890
The plaintiff sued the defendant on account on several distinct causes of action, one of which, the third, was for services rendered to the defendant, at its request, as its
The defendant requested the court to instruct the jury that the burden of proof was upon the plaintiff to establish that the services for which he claimed compensation were clearly outside of his duties as an officer or director of the corporation. This the court refused, except as.given in the general charge by the court. It is contended in argument that the equivalent of this instruction was not given, and that the refusal to give the instruction asked, or its equivalent, was error. As a general proposition, the instruction asked was correct. The plaintiff, ordinarily, must show, by a preponderance of the evidence; all the necessary facts to establish his cause of action. But it is not essential that such facts should be shown by the evidence offered by the plaintiff. It is sufficient if. they are shown by the evidence introduced in the case, whether by the plaintiff or the defendant. If the facts necessary to establish the plaintiff’s cause of action, or any one of them where there are several, appear from the evidence introduced, it is sufficient. Hence, it is not necessarily error for the court -to fail, or even refuse to give when asked, such an instruction as the one requested in this case. But the jury should be instructed in all cases that the facts necessary to entitle a party to recover on his cause of action or counter-claim should appear from the evidence introduced, by a preponderance thereof. This, we think,
The defendant requested the court to instruct the jury that the plaintiff could not recover for any sums of money paid, laid out, or expended by him for the defendant prior to June 5, 1886, nor for any services rendered by him for the defendant prior to said date, because they were barred by paragraph 1, sec. 196, Code Civil Proc., which instruction was refused by the court; and the refusal is claimed ■as error. The section of the statute as to the time within which actions may be begun is as follows: “Sec. 196. Within two years: (1) An action upon a contract, obligation, or liability not founded upon an instrument of writ