126 P. 987 | Or. | 1912
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a judgment rendered against him for the sum of $6.50 in an action wherein he sought to recover $50. The controversy arose out of the purchase and sale of a. mare. The plaintiff’s theory is that, having bought the animal for his own use, he sold it to the defendant for $250, and had received on account thereof $200. The defendant’s contention is that he engaged plaintiff to purchase for him a horse at a reasonable price, which he stipulated to pay, and also to give plaintiff a reasonable compensation for his services; that plaintiff bought the mare for him and paid therefor only $190, but falsely represented to defehdant that he paid for the animal $247, and that his compensation for the services performed was $3; that defendant, relying upon such representations, paid plaintiff $200, and agreed to pay the further sum of $50, but that upon discovering the fraud he found that he had overpaid' plaintiff, and to reimburse him the jury
The defendant also produced witnesses by whom he offered to prove declarations to the same effect, which he had made in their presence, but in the absence of the defendant. Objections to such method of proving relevant facts having been sustained, exceptions were reserved, and it is maintained that errors were thereby committed.
The declarations undertaken to be proved were self-serving, and, being no part of the res gestae, they were inadmissible. No errors were committed in refusing to receive the affidavit mentioned, nor in excluding the testimony offered.
It follows that the judgment should be affirmed; and it is so ordered. Affirmed.