2 Colo. App. 14 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1892
delivered the opinion of the court.
It is impossible to uphold this judgment. It is unsupported by the evidence though it was entered upon the verdict of a jurjr. The law by which the rights and correlative obligations of the parties are to be measured was neither accurately nor adequately expressed by the instructions.
Some time in the latter part of the year 1889, Fraser and Chalmers, the appellees, were a copartnership doing business in the city of Denver. On that date they sold a Huntington mill for §765 on the order of one A. J. Ware. It is
The jury were not correctly instructed. They were told substantially that Ware was the manager' of the company, and that if as such manager he ordered the mill shipped to
The instruction given on the legal force and effect of the by-laws of the company is probably not available as error on this hearing, since no assignment is based on it. It is not deemed necessary to express all the rules which must govern the settlement of this controversy, for they will probably be correctly laid down on the next trial.
Since the judgment is wholly unsupported by the necessary proof of a most material averment, and the court erred in instructing the jury as to the law, this case must be reversed and remanded.
Reversed.