Bilby v. Thomas Gin-Compress Co.

1912 OK 447, 124 P. 1093, 33 Okla. 254, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 679
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 25, 1912
Docket1909
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1912 OK 447 (Bilby v. Thomas Gin-Compress Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bilby v. Thomas Gin-Compress Co., 1912 OK 447, 124 P. 1093, 33 Okla. 254, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 679 (Okla. 1912).

Opinion

DUNN, J.

This case presents error from the district court of Hughes county, in which on March 1, 1909, the defendant in error as plaintiff filed its petition in which it prayed for judgment against the defendant, plaintiff in error here, for the- sum of $1,568.21 for and on account of certain goods, wares, and merchandise sold and delivered to him at his instance and request. To this petition defendant filed answer in which he admitted having purchased the goods from the plaintiff, but set up that the same was machinery for a gin, and was purchased on a contract containing a warranty. A copy of the contract was attached to the answer and introduced in evidence. The warranty contained therein read as follows:

“The Phelps Improved Cleaner Gins are sold subject to the following warranty: That with proper management they are capable of doing good work, and in ginning rough and dirty cotton will make a cleaner sample than any other gin now on the market running under the same conditions. Materials used in their construction are guaranteed to be of the best stock obtainable and the workmanship A No. 1.”

Of this the defendant pleaded':

*256 “That the machinery was not as represented in said contract; that it would not perform the work for which it was intended; that it was not as represented; that this defendant requested the said plaintiff to make the said machinery good, but that plaintiff refused or neglected to do so; that this defendant when he was unable to make the said machinery perform its work properly and plaintiff failed to make said machinery good, and, after attempting to do so, failed to make the said machinery work properly, tendered the said machinery back to the said plaintiff, but plaintiff refused to accept the same, and that said plaintiff refused, and still refuses, to carry out its contract with this said defendant.”

The reply was a general denial, on which issues the cause was presented to a jury, which returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff and against the defendant for the amount sued for with interest. Motion for new trial was filed and denied, and the cause has been regularly lodged in this court for review.

Counsel for defendant make a great many assignments of error, many of which in our judgment are without substantial merit and which on a new trial, which we find must be granted, would not likely occur again. Hence we do not notice them.

On the examination of witness Hutchinson, who it appears was the salesman who had sold this .machinery to the defendant, and whose testimony was of undoubted consequence and weight because of his familiarity with the same, he was asked and permitted to answer in the affirmative, over the objection and exception of counsel for defendant, this question:

“I will ask you to state whether or not the machinery that you sold Mr. Bilby was exactly as represented in the contract which he signed?”

It is to be noticed that this was the specific, identical question which was presented to the court by the pleadings for tire determination of the jury. It does not call for any fact, but calls for a conclusion made up of a large number of facts, and it is not couched in language which will permit the witness to give his testimony, but presents in the language of the attorney the ultimate fact at issue, and requires a simple assent. Thereafter, he was asked this question:

*257 “Mr. Hutchinson, now, I will ask you that with proper management now this warranty that Mr. Bilby signed at the time you sold him this machinery that with proper management they are capable of doing good work, and in ginning rough and dirty cotton will make a cleaner sample than any other gin now on the market, running under the same conditions,-will they do that?”

To this question there was the 'objection that it was leading, and called for a conclusion of the witness. The same was overruled, and the witness again answered, “Yes.” The witness was thereafter asked, referring to the warranty:

“It says that the materials used in their construction are guaranteed to be of the best stock obtainable and the workmanship A. No. 1, is that true?”

The objection made thereto was that it was leading and called for a conclusion. This likewise was by the court overruled, and the witness answered, “It is.” The ruling on all of these questions was excepted to, and in this court is assigned as error. The purpose of interrogating witnesses concerning issues in a case is to give information to the jury, to the end that a conclusion may be reached in accordance with the facts. Witnesses and evidence are offered for the purpose of establishing facts, and it is for the jury, and not the witnesses or the counsel who interrogate them, to draw conclusions. Encompassed within the questions and answers asked and secured from this witness was the ultimate fact to be found by the jury of whether the machinery was exactly as represented in the contract, and whether with proper management it was capable of doing good work and making a cleaner sample than any other gin on the market, and whether it was constructed of the best stock obtainable and the workmanship thereon A. No. 1. If the jury accepted the testimony of this witness, and it had an absolute right to do so, notwithstanding anj' evidence which may have conflicted with it, there was no room for controversy as to who should recover in the case, for, by securing from the witness his assent to these bald, bare conclusions which covered the entire issue in the case, there was left no room for deliberation and consideration of the evidence of defendant wherein he sought to show that the machinery had failed to meet the demands of the warranty. To two of these *258 questions complained' of counsel for plaintiff offer no argument of extenuation in their brief, and in our judgment they are plainly erroneous, and prejudicially so.

In the case of Combs v. Agricultural Ditch Co., 17 Colo. 146, 28 Pac. 966, 31 Am. St. Rep. 275, the question at issue was whether there had been for two years last past sufficient water in the ditch to irrigate lands which had been previously irrigated by the ditch. A witness was asked this question:

“From your experience as a farmer, and in irrigation in connection with it, is there water enough in that ditch now, or has there been for the last two years, to irrigate the lands which have heretofore been irrigated by that ditch ?”

Discussing the objection which was made to this question, the court says:

•“This question was objected to, first, on the ground that it did not appear that the witness had knowledge; and second, because the matter embraced in the question was the question then at issue and on trial. The objection was overruled. The ruling was excepted to, and is assigned for error. Without noticing the first ground of objection, it is clear that the objection was well taken upon the second ground, and should have been sustained. The question was not merely introductory.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1912 OK 447, 124 P. 1093, 33 Okla. 254, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 679, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bilby-v-thomas-gin-compress-co-okla-1912.