Collier v. Dyer

27 Ark. 478
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 27 Ark. 478 (Collier v. Dyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Collier v. Dyer, 27 Ark. 478 (Ark. 1872).

Opinion

Greco, J.

Tliis action was commenced by appellants before a justice of the peace of Yell county.

The appellee filed a plea of set-off, claiming a larger amount for medical services rendered one of tlie appellants than tbeir demand against him.

A trial was had; verdict and judgment against the appellants for $36 40 and costs, from which judgment they appealed to the Circuit Court.

In the Circuit Court a like finding and judgment was had, only for a smaller sum; the appellants moved for a new trial; their motion was overruled and they appealed.

This court has long since holden that to authorize a set-off, the debts must be mutual and due to and from the same parties. Field, vs. Watkins, 5 Ark., 672; Bizzell vs. Stone, 12 Id. 378; Brown vs. Houstin, 23 Id. 333.

Under this ruling, the appellee could not set-off an individual account on Wilson W. Collier, against the firm demand of E. G. & W. W. Collier. And some of the instructions given by the court, in behalf of the appellee, were clearly erroneous, being abstract and not supported by sufficient evidence, but as these were not excepted to, or made grounds in the motion for a new trial, we are not called upon to consider them here.

The evidence, on the trial, certainly failed to show a mutuality of accounts between the appellants and the appellee, and, consequently, his plea of set-off could not have entitled Mm to a recovery, and if the evidence was such as satisfied the court that he had a valid and subsisting defense, in payment of the whole, or a part of the plaintiff’s demand, under Cheep. VIII, Title VII, of the Civil Code, he might have allowed the appellee to have amended his pleadings in such manner as would have worked no prejudice to the rights of the appellants. But we do not wish to be understood as intimating that the court, on its own motion, should suggest or make changes in a litigant’s defense, where the ends of justice do not absolutely require such suggestion.

If the court had been satisfied, by proof, that the Colliers as a firm, had agreed to accept medical services of the appellee rendered ~W. ~W. Collier in part payment of the appellant’s bill for lumber delivered, and upon á proper issue the jury had so found, we would not attempt to weigh the evidence or disturb the verdict, if there was evidence tending to support such finding. But there is clearly no such promise, as,, under our statute, could have rendered E. Gr. Collier, or the firm of E. Gr. & "W". "W". Collier, liable for future services to be rendered W. W. Collier as an individual; and not the slightest evidence that E. Gr. Collier ever, in any way, became liable to pay the appellee the excess of his medical bill, rendered against W. W. Collier, and if the pleadings had been changed, or acted upon by the court as if amended, and if there had been sufficient evidence to have sustained appellee’s claim in part, the finding to the full extent was certainly unauthorized by either law or evidence, and in such cases a Circuit Court should always exercise its sound discretion and grant a new trial.

The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded to be proceeded in according to law.

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Related

Western Coal & Mining Co. v. Hollenbeck
80 S.W. 145 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1903)
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48 S.W. 1012 (Court Of Appeals Of Indian Territory, 1899)
Simpson v. Biffle
38 S.W. 345 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1896)

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Bluebook (online)
27 Ark. 478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collier-v-dyer-ark-1872.