Eagle Brewing Co. v. Colaluca

94 A. 680, 38 R.I. 224, 1915 R.I. LEXIS 39
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 2, 1915
StatusPublished

This text of 94 A. 680 (Eagle Brewing Co. v. Colaluca) 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
Eagle Brewing Co. v. Colaluca, 94 A. 680, 38 R.I. 224, 1915 R.I. LEXIS 39 (R.I. 1915).

Opinion

Baker, J.

This is an- action in assumpsit to recover the sum of $2,739.80 claimed to be due as a balance on book account.

The defendant in 1910 was a wholesale liquor dealer in Providence, conducting business under the name of Colaluca Brothers. For some years he had purchased ale and beer of the plaintiff. On April 13,1910, he was indebted to it for a net balance of $2,500, which represented an in *226 debtedness for ale and beer which had accumulated during a considerable period of time, and also the sum of $583, which was the net price of ale and beer purchased by him from the plaintiff from March 16, to April 8, 1910, both dates inclusive. The plaintiff admits that it was paid $583 on April 13. The claim sued upon includes the item of $2,500 and an additional sum of $239.80 for purchases made after April 8, 1910. The defendant admits the indebtedness of $239.80, but claims that on said April 13 he paid the entire amount then due to plaintiff, namely, $3,083. The only matter in dispute, therefore, is as to whether or not the sum of $2,500 was paid on April 13. Whatever sum was paid that da3^ was given to John J. Ballam, the treasurer of the plaintiff corporation. It is admitted that he was authorized to collect whatever might be due from the defendant to the plaintiff and to receipt for the same.

The testimony shows that sometime in the forenoon of April 13, Mr. Ballam went to defendant’s place of business with two bills for goods sold the defendant. The first item on the larger of the bills is "Balance net $2500.00,” following this are nine separate charges for lager, amounting in quantity to 109 halves and 237 quarters. The smaller bill consists of three items, charging in all, 10 barrels of ale. Both bills carry the gross prices only and the net prices nowhere appear. The aggregate of the gross charges for the lager and ale as appears by the bills is $985. The parties agreed however that after crediting two half barrels as returned the amount due for lager and ale as itemized on the bills is $583, and that the defendant gave his check for that amount which was paid in due course. Mr. Ballam says that this was all that was paid him. The defendant, on the other hand, testifies that having been notified the month before that the entire balance due must be paid he had borrowed money from friends and made collections from his customers so that he had in his safe that morning $2,500 in bills which he then paid Mr. Ballam. In that he then paid a large sum of'money to Mr. Ballam he is corroborated by his *227 bookkeeper, his father, a brother and a customer, although these witnesses all acknowledge ignorance of the amount of money paid. The larger bill was receipted in pencil thus:

“Red Api 13
Ballam Cr 2—2
Ret”

The smaller bill was receipted in the same manner, exclusive of the credit of the two halves returned. Mr. Ballam testified that he did not intend to receipt for the item of $2,500.

The case was tried in June, 1914, and the jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the full amount of the claim $2,739.80. The defendant duly filed a motion for a new trial and upon its denial brought the case to this court on his bill of exceptions.

The bill contains twelve exceptions, the first taken to the exclusion of testimony, the next four to portions of the charge of the court to the jury, the next six to the refusal of the court to charge the jury as requested by the defendant, and the last exception is to the denial of a motion for new trial.

(1) As to the first exception, one James Ricci was on the stand as a witness for the defendant. He testified that he had a conversation with one Andrew Keiley in 1912 about this item of $2,500. It was at that time in evidence that Mr. Keiley was a stockholder in the plaintiff corporation; that at some time before 1910 he had been treasurer thereof and that in 1910 and 1912 he was vice-president of the same, but as such officer had not much to do with the financial management of the company. The witness was asked, “What was that conversation?” An objection thereto was sustained and defendant excepted. It is apparently claimed that, by virtue of the fact that he was vice-president of the company, without any other evidence of his authority to act for it, whatever Mr. Keiley might say in conversation with third persons about a past transaction, with which he personally had nothing to do, would bind the company, if of the nature of an admission against its interest. We think the mere state *228 ment of the claim shows its lack of proper foundation. Yol. 1, Am. & Eng. Ency. L. 695. The exception is without merit.

(2) The second, third and fourth exceptions may be considered together as they refer to the instruction of the court that the burden was upon the defendant to satisfy the minds of the jury by a fair preponderance of the evidence that he had paid the item of $2,500, which instruction was twice repeated in substantially the same form. This instruction was correct .and these three exceptions are overruled.

After having given this instruction three times in the <course of its charge the court repeated it in an expanded form By reading to the jury and charging the second request of •.the plaintiff. The fifth exception was taken to this instruction and for the reasons already stated it is overruled.

(3) The sixth exception was taken to the refusal of the court to instruct the jury as follows: “Any instrument purporting to be a release of any special demand whatever be the consideration expressed therefor shall be construed to have that effect, although no seal be affixed thereto. ” This requested instruction is in the exact language of a portion of Section 12 of Chapter 253 of the General Laws of 1909. That section gives the same effect to an “instrument purporting to be a release” whether with or without a seal. In other words, it declares a seal unnecessary to the validity of a release. But a receipted bill is not a release. It cannot be claimed to be more than an ordinary receipt given in payment of a sum of money which is only prima facie evidence of the facts recited and may, therefore, be explained or contradicted by parol. See Vaughan v. Mason, 23 It. I. 348, 350. The instruction asked fpr is not relevant to the present case and was rightly refused.

(4) The seventh and eighth requests are as follows: “7. An itemized bill marked paid (or received) is a receipt for the items contained in the bill. 8. Where a receipt is written, signed and delivered by a creditor (or his agent) to the possession of a debtor, it is prima facie evidence of payment.”

*229 We think it was error to refuse to grant these requests. The first request is in effect a request for an instruction that an itemized account marked paid has the same character and effect as a receipt. In Steffens v. Nelson, 94 Minn. 365, on page 367, it is expressly held that “An itemized bill marked as paid is a receipt of that bill.

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Bluebook (online)
94 A. 680, 38 R.I. 224, 1915 R.I. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eagle-brewing-co-v-colaluca-ri-1915.