Carstens Bros. v. Frye-Bruhn & Co.

1 Alaska 140
CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedApril 15, 1901
DocketNo. 957
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Alaska 140 (Carstens Bros. v. Frye-Bruhn & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carstens Bros. v. Frye-Bruhn & Co., 1 Alaska 140 (D. Alaska 1901).

Opinion

BROWN, District Judge.

This action was tried to a jury, and, after having retired to consider their verdict, they returned into court, and presented their verdict, which is in the following form:

“We, the jury, duly impaneled and sworn in the above-entitled cause, find for the defendant, Frye-Bruhn and Company.
“Frank E. Burns, JForeman.”

A motion for a new trial was filed in due time, one of the grounds of which, among others, is as follows:

“The verdict of the jury rendered herein is defective, and incapable of supporting a judgment, in that it does not dispose of the issues as [141]*141to the Corporation Frye-Bruhn Company, or as to Herman Meyer, hut is a finding only in favor of the defendant, the copartnership, to wit, Frye-Bruhn & Co.”

The third ground of the motion is:

‘‘The verdict of the jury is contrary to, and not supported hy, the evidence in the case. According to the evidence óf the defendant Meyer, and which was not controverted by him or in his behalf, the plaintiffs were entitled to a verdict against him.”

The other propositions presented by the motion for a new trial will not be seriously considered by the court at this time.

While the verdict in this case is perhaps somewhat uncertain in its terms, and not all that could be desired, considering the issues submitted to the jury, still it seems to be sufficiently clear to indicate the intention of the jury in returning it in the form in which we find it. It is said:

“Though the verdict may not conclude formally or punctually to the words of the issue, yet, if the point in controversy can be concluded out of the findings, the court shall work it into form, and make it certain.” 28 Eng. & Am. Encyc. of Law, p. 286

Again, it is said in Miller v. Shackleford, 4 Dana, 271:

“In considering a verdict with a view to its sufficiency, the first object is to ascertain what the jury intended to find, and this is to be done by considering the verdict liberally, with the sole view of ascertaining the meaning of the jury, and not under the technical rules-of construction which are applicable to the pleadings. If the meaning of the jury can be ascertained, and the verdict on the point at issue can be made out, the court will mold it into form, and make it certain.”

Again, it is said:

“The utmost favor is always extended to verdicts. They are not to be construed as strictly, as pleadings are. Whenever the court can collect the clear meaning of the jury from the findings, it is-bound to mold it into form, and make it certain.”

[142]*142Again, it is said that:

“The verdict must comprehend, the whole issue or issues submitted to the jury in the particular case, otherwise the judgment rendered on it may he reversed.”

To comply with the requirements of this rule, however, it is generally held that, if the verdict is not expressed formally and technically in the words of the issue, yet, if the point in issue can be concluded from the finding of the jury, the court will work the verdict into form, and make it certain. Middleton v. Quigley, 12 N. J. Law, 352.

The converse of this proposition, it is said, is also true.

“Hence it is declared that, if the point on which the verdict is given be so uncertain that it cannot be clearly ascertained whether the jury meant to find the issue or not, it cannot be helped by intendment.” In support of this proposition are cited: Gerrish v. Train, 3 Pick. 124; Coffin v. Jones, 11 Pick. 44; Jewett v. Davis, 6 N. H. 518; Stearns v. Barrett, 1 Mason, 170, Fed. Cas. No. 13,337.

This action was brought against Frye-Bruhn Company and Flerman Meyer, doing business under the firm name and style of Frye-Bruhn & Co. The plaintiffs, among other things, allege that “at all times hereinafter mentioned the defendant Frye-Bruhn Company was and is a corporation existing under and by virtue of the laws of the state of Washington,” and that “said corporation and the defendant Herman Meyer were at all times hereinafter mentioned copart-ners doing business under the firm name and style of Frye-Bruhn & Co.”

It is further alleged in the complaint that on a certain day thereafter mentioned a contract was entered into between the plaintiffs and the defendants, whereby the plaintiffs were to furnish to the defendants all meats used by them in their business in Alaska for a period extending from [143]*143said date to April I, 1899, at the market rates, to be shipped by steamer from the city of Seattle to Skagway; that •under said contract it is claimed there were meats shipped to the value of $5,232.09; that $2,000 was paid thereon; and that there was a balance of $3,232.09 due and unpaid, for which judgment is prayed.

The answer denies that at the times mentioned in the complaint the defendants were copartners, or were at that time or since then carrying on business under said copart-nership of Frye-Bruhn & Co.; denies making the contract of purchase by Frye-Bruhn Company, or by Frye-Bruhn & Co.; denies indebtedness of Frye-Bruhn Company or of Frye-Bruhn & Co., or any agreement to pay plaintiffs for meat in any manner.

In this case the evidence tended to show that a relation at one time existed between Frye-Bruhn Company and Herman Meyer, which probably constituted them a partnership at will; that, prior to the contract of purchase referred to in plaintiffs’ complaint, the relation theretofore existing between said Frye-Bruhn Company and Herman Meyer had been terminated; that the partnership had been dissolved, and that the plaintiffs were fully notified of that fact before any shipments of meat, for the value of which suit was brought, had been shipped by the plaintiffs. The instructions to the jury in substance required that, if they found there was no partnership existing at the time that the purchase was claimed to have been made, or that Herman Meyer was no longer the agent of Frye-Bruhn Company, and therefore without authority to bind them in the purchase, they should find for the defendants.

Under the evidence and law as given to the jury by the court the jury may have well found that the defendant Frye-Bruhn Company and Herman Meyer were at one time co-partners, and doing business as such; that-at the time of the [144]*144purchase such copartnership had ceased to exist, and that no purchase whatever was ever made by the copartnership. The verdict in this case would meet these issues, and could not well be construed in any other way than as meeting these issues as above indicated.

But it is said by counsel for the plaintiffs that Herman Meyer admits an indebtedness, and, if this is a verdict at all, it is a verdict in favor of all the defendants, and, as it is in language only for Frye-Bruhn & Co., it perhaps should not be regarded under the law as a verdict at all.

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Related

Miller v. Shackleford
34 Ky. 264 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1836)
Myers v. Warner
3 Or. 212 (Clackamas County Circuit Court, Oregon, 1870)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Alaska 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carstens-bros-v-frye-bruhn-co-akd-1901.