38 Kan. 417 | Kan. | 1888
Opinion by
Yan Fossen and Wilcox were partners, engaged in the real-estate and insurance business in the city of Fort Scott. S. P. Mosher, the defendant in error,
The only errors alleged are, that the evidence does not sustain the verdict, and that the court ruled out competent testimony material to their defense. On the first of these propositions this court has often laid down the rule that where there is some evidence to sustain a verdict this court will not disturb it. This was a disputed question of fact, and the defendants gave their theory of the matter and the plaintiff gave his, and the jury were the exclusive judges of the matter, and we cannot disturb their verdict on that ground. The evidence excluded is as follows: “The defendants offered to prove in answer to that question, that Van Eossen then stated to the witness in the presence of Mosher, that Mosher had no interest in the real-estate business of Van Eossen & Wilcox, and that Mosher assented thereto.” This was a conversation said to have taken place in the office of the defendants, in the presence of Van Eossen and their book-keeper, in which Van Eossen purported to have made the statement in Mosher’s presence, and addressed to Mosher, that he, Mosher, then had no interest in the business. This was after the lot transaction. We think this evidence was properly excluded. This related to their partnership real-estate business, and not to this individual transaction. There is no controversy in relation to .their general business, and no dispute about it. They closed and settled it up, and no claim was made, so far as the record shows, that there was any difference between them in relation to the general partnership business. This being true, it was not competent to bind the plaintiff by any declarations that related solely to that partnership, or that general business in which they were engaged, and which had no reference to this
We think there is ample evidence to support the verdict and judgment, and the exclusion of the evidence complained of was not error.
It is recommended that the judgment of the court below be affirmed.
By the Court: It is so ordered.