90 W. Va. 161 | W. Va. | 1922
In an action begun before a justice for tbe value of goods alleged to bave been lost in transit, plaintiffs in tbe justice’s court and again on appeal in tbe Intermediate Court of Ka-nawha County, obtained a judgment against defendant, tbe judgment on tbe appeal being for $282.65, instead of $232.01, tbe amount of tbe judgment rendered by tbe justice. Tbe circuit court having denied defendant an appeal, an appeal was awarded it by this court, to test tbe correctness or incorrectness of tbe rulings and judgments complained of.
Tbe first of tbe points of error assigned is tbe denial of defendant’s motions to suppress tbe depositions of tbe witnesses J. R. Pugh, Mrs. A. M. "Welford, and Arthur P. Hawkins ; the depositions of the first two of these witnesses showing non-delivery of two shipments from plaintiffs to them, and tbe latter showing delivery to defendant of a consignment of goods to plaintiffs .in September 1917.
Tbe grounds of tbe motions to suppress were tbe want of legal and proper notice to defendant of tbe taking of these three sets of depositions. Tbe only notices attached to these depositions were two acceptances of J. S. Darst, Auditor, and an acknowledgment signed by him that notice bad been served- on him. These motions were supported by the affidavit of C. W. Striekling, attorney for defendant, to tbe effect that defendant was not and never bad been a corporation, but was an unincorporated association of individuals, naming tbe persons, that as such it bad never complied with tbe laws of West Yirginia with reference to non-resident corporations doing business in this state, and that it was a joint stock association in tbe hands of tbe persons named as trustees, and that since July 1, 1918, it bad not’done any business in this state. Moreover, the process and pleadings show that defendant was sued as a joint stock association, and not as a corporation. No evidence was offered by plaintiffs to controvert tbe facts alleged in tbe affidavit. We think tbe motions should bave prevailed, and that the trial court erred in overruling them. Tbe depositions related to vital issues in tbe case, namely, the delivery to and non-delivery of tbe
The second point of error is that the trial court erroneously admitted in'evidence over defendant’s objection certain papers purporting to be receipts of the defendant for the goods alleged to have been lost or unaccounted for. While these papers were.written on printed blanks such as are usually used by express companies, they were introduced in connection with the evidence of plaintiffs’ clerk, who had not delivered the goods to the express company, nor packed them, and did not know anything about the contents of the packages except as reported to him. All he knew, if he knew anything, was what he said plaintiffs’ books showed, and that the drayman who was supposed to have .transferred the goods from plaintiffs’ place of business, had returned the receipts to plaintiffs. There was no attempt to otherwise identify these receipts with the receipts, if any, actually given; nor was there any proof of the agency of the persons whose names were signed to the receipts, or that the persons were at the time in charge of defendant’s place of business. Nor was there any proof of the circumstances or manner of conducting the business of defendant. Instruments of this kind do not prove themselves, nor the agency of the persons signing them. They must be identified as genuine, and the agency proven independently of the papers themselves, as in the casé of other writings. Fielder v. Camp Construction Co., 63 W. Va. 459; Williamsport Hardwood Lumber Co. v. B. & O. R. R. Co., 71 W. Va. 741. And this rule of evidence
A third point is that the court erroneously allowed the witnesses Gentry and Garnett to give evidence of -the contents of the outgoing shipments, which as to them was for the most part hearsay. Of course what other employees informed them as to the contents of the packages of which they had no personal knowledge, was not evidence. However they gave evidence of the manner of doing business, that shipments were reported to them by other employees charged with such duties, and were delivered to the drayman, facts as to which they might properly testify; but these facts would amount to nothing unless connected with proof of the actual delivery of the goods to the defendant and receipt on its behalf by authorized agents.
The next two correlative points relied on are that the trial court erred in overruling defendant’s motions to strike out all the evidence of the plaintiffs and direct a verdict for it, and to set aside the verdict and enter an order of - dismissal.
Not all of plaintiffs’ evidence was improper. But as we have indicated, much of it, especially the depositions, was improper and should have been excluded. But all that remained was insufficient to sustain a verdict for plaintiffs. Here, however, we can see that sufficient evidence may, and likely does exist, and which, if produced, would entitle plaintiffs to a recovery. Should we then, as requested, on reversing the judgment, dismiss the action without giving plaintiffs an opportunity to make out their case if they can do so ? Such is not the practice when, as in this case, there has been by misapprehension of law an omission to deduce existing evidence to make out a case. LaBelle Iron Works v. Quarter Savings Bank, 74 W. Va. 569; Cook v. Baleigh Lumber Co., Id. 503; Peabody Ins. Co. v. Wilson, 29 W. Va. 528; Schwenck
It follows as a necessary conclusion that the last point of error, namely, the refusal of the trial court to set aside the verdict and award defendant a new trial, must be affirmed. We have decided that plaintiffs by legal and competent evidence failed to make out a prima facie case in the several particulars indicated, and that the judgment must be reversed, the verdict set aside, and the defendant awarded a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.