Dodge v. Kiene

44 N.W. 191, 28 Neb. 216, 1889 Neb. LEXIS 341
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 44 N.W. 191 (Dodge v. Kiene) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dodge v. Kiene, 44 N.W. 191, 28 Neb. 216, 1889 Neb. LEXIS 341 (Neb. 1889).

Opinion

Cobb, J.

This cause is brought to this court on error from the district court of Douglas county.

The plaintiff brought this action in the court below for the failure of defendant to accept and pay for 600 hogs, according to the terms of the following agreement and guaranty:

“South Omaha, Neb., April 5th, 1887.
“ I hereby agree to deliver to F. G. Kiene, at Wood River, Nebraska, between the 15th of May and the 15th of June, 1887, at buyer’s option, six hundred hogs, to weigh from 275 lbs. upwards and to average 300 lbs., at $5.25 per hundred. Said F. G. Kiene to call for delivery of all or any part of said six hundred hogs, at any time between the dates named. F. G. Kiene.
“F. C. Dodge.
“ In case said F. G. Kiene fails to take said hogs as per said agreement, or in any manner fails to keep said agreement, I hereby agree to pay to said F. C. Dodge the sum of six hundred dollars.
“George Adams & Burke.”

2. The plaintiff duly performed all the conditions of said contract on his part, and was on the 15th day of June, 1887, and for a calendar month prior thereto, ready and willing to deliver the hogs therein mentioned, and on said [218]*21815th clay of June, 1887, duly tendered the same to the defendant.

3.That the defendant refused to accept said hogs and to pay for them pursuant to his agreement, to the damage of the plaintiff in the sum of $2,070, for which he prays judgment, with interest from date.

The defendant on leave answered: That he denied each and every allegation contained therein except as in this answer specifically admitted ; denied' that he is indebted to plaintiff in any sum whatever upon the pretended contract sued on herein, and further says that at no time between the dates in said pretended contract mentioned, did said plaintiff have a sufficient number of hogs of the kind and’weight mentioned to furnish to defendant; wherefore defendant prays to be dismissed with his costs.

There was a trial to a jury with a verdict for the defendants and judgment for defendant's costs, with exceptions on the record, on which the plaintiff assigns the following errors:

1 and 2. In overruling the motion for a new trial, and that the verdict is not sustained by the law or evidence.

3. In refusing to give plaintiff's instructions to the jury.

4. In giving instructions 3 and 4 on the court’s own motion.

5. In admitting testimony objected to.

6. In refusing to admit testimony offered.

7. Error’s of law excepted to on the trial, and

8. In rendering judgment for defendant on his original answer.

Considering the first and second assignments, they are not believed to constitute reversible errors in this instance, and are therefore overruled.

As to the third and fourth, the plaintiff cannot under the decisions of this court avail himself of the alleged errors, for the reason that no exceptions were saved on the trial, in the first instance, to the refusal to give the instructions [219]*219offered, nor were there exceptions taken, in the second instance, to the instructions of the court given on its own motion, and ai’e therefore overruled.

•As to the fifth error, the first witness on the trial called by defendant was Frank Chittenden, who testified that he was a salesman at the stockyards at South Omaha, in 1887, employed by George Adams and Burke; that he was present when the parties to this suit were in the office of Adams and Burke at tlie stockyards in that year. Being shown a certain paper on which this action is brought, he was asked the question, What paper is that? He answered, That is the original of the contract that he wrote; that he made a couple of copies of it afterwards; that he wrote Exhibit A (the guaranty to the contract), referring to it at the request of the defendant.

Q,. Did you hear the arrangement, or talk, between Mr. Kiene and Mr.'Dodge which led up to the transaction ?

A. I heard some talk down in the yard, but did not hear all of it.

Q. What was said1 by these parties in your presence, and in that of each other, as to the agreement, which led up to your writing it ?

A. He was to take 600 hogs, and if he failed to take them, he was to forfeit $500.

Q. Why, then, was the latter part of that attached, signed “George Adams and Burke;” what did Dodge want Kiene to do?

A. He wanted him to put up $500, and Kiene, in order not to lay out of the money, had Adams sign this contract, which answered the same purpose.

Q. Did Dodge agree, then, to take Adams and Burke, instead of Kiene, for that $500 ? (Objected to, as incompetent.)

Q,. I mean for $600 ?

By the court: Eemodel your question.

Q,. (Changed.) Did Dodge agree, then, to take Adams [220]*220and Burke instead of Kiene for that $600 ? (Objected to, that the question calls for evidence varying the terms of the written contract between the two parties, and is incompetent.)

By the court: Your question is leading, but I am going to give you just the same deal that I gave the other side on yesterday in this business, if I know how to do it. Try again.

Q,. What was said between the parties about the attaching of this latter part of the paper signed by George Adams and Burke,” if anything? (Objected to, as incompetent ; overruled.)

A. Dodge wanted Kiene to put up $500, and they talked it over, and Kiene did not want to lay out of that money and asked him if he would not take Adams for it, to which he said that he would, and that Adams would be good for the money.

There were other questions of the same general character asked and answered over objections, but the foregoing is sufficient to show the general character of the exceptions.

Attention is here called to the instrument sued on, and .to the fact that the suit is between Dodge and Kiene alone, and that while the guaranty clause of the contract is set out in the plaintiff’s petition, and, together with the instrument, was offered and received in evidence, yet it constitutes no part of the contract between the parties to this action. It would seem, with due deference to the court and counsel who tried the cause below, that any formal inquiry, by evidence or argument, as to this separate agreement of Adams and Burke, was superfluous and premature, in an action in which neither of the guarantors was a party.

The professed object of the defendant in the introduction of the evidence to which exceptions were taken, and of the court in receiving it, was to explain this guaranty clause of the contract, as though a peculiar refraction of borrowed light, from that source, would illuminate the main instru[221]*221ment. If the contract required explanation, and if parol evidence were competent to explain it, then, doubtless, such evidence should have been directed to the terms of the contract itself.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Coffman
416 N.W.2d 243 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1987)
Conley v. Hays
45 N.W.2d 900 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1951)
Jobbers Overall Co. v. E. R. Deputy Co.
192 N.W. 210 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1923)
Katt v. Swartz
165 N.W. 717 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1917)
Diels v. Kennedy
130 N.W. 740 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1911)
American Linseed Co. v. Eberson
104 S.W. 121 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1907)
Te Poel v. Shutt
78 N.W. 288 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1899)
United States National Bank of Omaha v. Geer
75 N.W. 1088 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1898)
Sylvester v. Carpenter Paper Co.
75 N.W. 1092 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1898)
Nebraska Exposition Ass'n v. Townley
65 N.W. 1062 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1896)
Quinn v. Moss
63 N.W. 931 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1895)
Clarke v. Kelsey
60 N.W. 138 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1894)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 N.W. 191, 28 Neb. 216, 1889 Neb. LEXIS 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dodge-v-kiene-neb-1889.