Cargill v. Atwood

27 A. 214, 18 R.I. 303, 1893 R.I. LEXIS 26
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 12, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 27 A. 214 (Cargill v. Atwood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cargill v. Atwood, 27 A. 214, 18 R.I. 303, 1893 R.I. LEXIS 26 (R.I. 1893).

Opinion

Tillinghast, J.

This is assumpsit for goods sold and delivered to, work and labor done and performed for, and cash advanced to John M. Oargill, defendants’ testator in his lifetime. Pleas, the general issue and the statute of limitations.

At the trial of the case in the Court of Common Pleas, at the December Term thereof, 1892, the plaintiff recovered a verdict for $2,414.4:4. The defendants now petition for a new trial on the grounds of erroneous rulings on the part of the Court, and that the verdict was against the evidence.

*304 The first contention of the defendants is, that there was no competent proof offered of the delivery of the goods charged to defendants’ testator, or of the performance of the work and labor charged to him, the plaintiff having been wrongfully permitted to testify in the case as to the identity of his books.

We think the books of account prodxiced by the plaintiff, supplemented by his oath, and identified by him and also by his clerk, Middleton, as being his regular books of original entries, were competent evidence to go to the jury of the sale and delivery of the goods, and the performance of the services charged therein, and also-of the prices charged therefor. Hagaman v. Case, 4 N. J. Law, 370; Ducoign v. Schreppel, 1 Yeates, Pa. 347; 2 Amer. & Eng. Encyc. Law, 467, 468, and cases cited. We also think it was competent for the plaintiff to testify to the identity of said books of account notwithstanding the other party to the cause of action was dead, this being a case in which he could have been a witness for this purpose at the common law, and hence within the exception of Pub. Stat. R. I. cap. 214, § 33;.l Greenleaf on Evidence, 13th ed. §§118, 119, and notes;'Wood’s Practice Evidence, §§ 143-145, and cases cited; Dexter v. Booth, 2 Allen, 559; Green v. Gould, 3 Allen, 465. The plaintiff’s case was strengthened also, by evidence that the defendants’ testator, in his lifetime had full access to said books of account, and himself, made a number of the entries, both on the debit and credit sides of the account in question.

• The second contention of the defendants is that the items charged as cash in said account should not have been allowed, as they were not proper subjects of book account. It is doubtless true that cash loaned or advanced is not ordinarily the proper subject of book account, except at any rate, to a very limited amount; Burns v. Fay, 14 Pick. 8; Kelton v. Hill, 58 Me. 114; Bassett v. Spofford, 11 N. H. 167; yet, where in the ordinary course of business between the parties, cash advances as well as payments are made the subject of book account, we see no reason for holding that such .items may not as well be entered on and proved by the books as the ordi *305 nary items of account may be. That is to say,, where the parties are in the habit of treating cash items, both on the debit and credit side of the account between them, as the proper subject of such account, the proof of the loan or advancement of money on the one side, or of the payment on account, of the same on the other, may be made by the production of the books, to the same extent as may the proof of the delivery of any other article. Wood’s Practice Evidence, § 144. Under the proof in this case we think it was properly left to the jury to determine whether or not the cash items were proper subjects of book account. The presiding Justice instructed the jury very clearly as to the law applicable to such transactions, and left it for them to find whether or not the course of dealing between the parties was such that cash items might properly be made the subject of book account.

The bill of particulars filed in the case shows charges under the date of July 31, 1878, as follows:

“ Stock and labor to May, 1876............... $159'01
“ “ April, 1877............... 57 85
Cottage at Vineyard, Mch. 6, 1876. .......... 300 00
Furniture “ “ “ ............ 100 00”
Shop on High St., 270....................... 225 00.
Making a total of........................... $841 86

This amount the defendants contend should not have been allowed by the jury, there being no proof in support of the items except the said books; that the lumping of the accounts rendered them inadmissible as book accounts and that, they are not proper subjects of such an account. We think the defendants’ contention as to the first two of these items at any rate is correct. The charges do not appear at the beginning of the account as a balance brought forward from a previous -account, as the dates would seem to indicate they might have been, but on the second page thereof, and each as having been made on July 31, 1878. There was no proof as to how these two items of $159.01 and $57.85 were made up, as to whether they ever appeared on any other account, or when they were in fact furnished, except that the first was *306 prior to May, 1816 and the second prior to April, 1811, both antedating the first entry in the very extended book account sued on. Nor was there any proof that these entries were made in accordance with the usual course of business between the parties. On the other hand they are merely lump charges, evidently made out of the ordinary course of business, and interjected into an account with which it does not appear that they have any connection. Eice on Evidence, 830, and cases cited; Lynch v. Petrie, 1 Nott & McCord, 130.

The court below evidently took the same view of the law, as the jury were expressly instructed “that the account should be itemized, and that lumping the accounts renders the entry inadmissible, and not a subject of book charge.” The jury, however, must haAm disregarded said instruction, as they found a verdict for the full amount of the plaintiff’s claim.

As to the other three items objected to, viz.:

“ Cottage at Vineyard, Mch. 6, 1816........ $300 00”
“Furniture “ “ “ ........ 100 00 ”
“ Shop on High St., 210.................... 225 00 ”

as there was evidence outside of the books that this property was transferred by the plaintiff to his father by mutual agreement, we think it was properly left to the jury to determine whether these charges were proven.

We do not think it was error on the part of the court below to rule that if there were mutual accounts between the parties, including items of debit and credit on each side, made within six years next before the commencement of the action, that no part of the account was barred by the statute of limitations. The books offered in evidence showed that there were mutual accounts between Charles Cargill and his father John M. Cargill, including items of debit and credit on each side, made by said John M.

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Bluebook (online)
27 A. 214, 18 R.I. 303, 1893 R.I. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cargill-v-atwood-ri-1893.