Elerath Steel & Iron Co. v. Cornfoot

253 P. 529, 121 Or. 232, 1927 Ore. LEXIS 74
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 27, 1927
StatusPublished

This text of 253 P. 529 (Elerath Steel & Iron Co. v. Cornfoot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elerath Steel & Iron Co. v. Cornfoot, 253 P. 529, 121 Or. 232, 1927 Ore. LEXIS 74 (Or. 1927).

Opinion

COSHOW, J.

The greater part of the brief of defendants is based npon the plea of res judicata. The allegations setting out this plea were stricken ont on motion of the plaintiff before the first trial. The plea of res judicata was thereby eliminated. The second trial was conducted npon the same pleadings as the first. The plea of res judicata, therefore, is not in the case. The decision of this court on the former appeal is the law in this case: Howland v. Fenner Mfg. Co., ante, p. — (252 Pac. 962); Wicks v. Sanborn, 81 Or. 366 (159 Pac. 71); Williams v. Pacific Surety Co., 70 Or. 203 (139 Pac. 914). In the former decision of this court in this case it was held that the judgment-roll in the case of Montgomery Estate Co. v. Elerath Steel & Iron Co. was admissible as evidence. This is the case claimed by the defendants to be an adjudication of the issues involved in the instant case. An examination of the record, however, discloses that the issues are different in the two cases. Defendants had the benefit of the judgment-roll of the Montgomery Estate Company case as evidence herein. It was pertinent for the purpose of identifying the property therein involved and was an adjudication in so far as that property was concerned, but the lumber claimed by the plaintiff in the case at bar was the lumber taken from the buildings and ways in the streets and such lumber as taken from the other buildings prior to the tenth day of November, 1919, when the lease under which plaintiff claims expired. The learned court properly instructed the jury in the instant case that plaintiff could recover for only such *235 lumber as was taken from the streets and buildings which were wrecked prior to November 10, 1919. The judgment-roll in the Montgomery Estate Company case adjudicated the ownership of the other material on the leased premises. The Circuit Court ruled properly in denying the motion of defendants for a nonsuit. Whether the lumber involved in the instant case was from the streets and buildings demolished prior to November 10, 1919, or was from buildings wrecked since that date was a question of fact which was properly submitted to the jury.

Defendants attempt to predicate error because the court refused to give defendants’ instruction No. IV in the exact language as requested. The record shows that no exception or objection to the instructions given by the court were ma'de or taken by the defendants. On the contrary, the record shows that defendants expressed orally in court their satisfaction with the instructions given. Defendants cannot now be heard to say that the court erred in refusing to give the instruction requested.

The defendants complain because the court did not warn the jury to disregard the voluntary statement made by one of plaintiff’s counsel during the trial. The statement made by the counsel was improper, but the court promptly rebuked counsel for making it. Defendants made no objection to the remarks at that time and no error was made by the court. On the contrary, the court’s ruling was correct. The defendants made no request to have the jury especially instructed to disregard the remarks. There is, therefore, no error in the ruling of the court in connection with those remarks.

The only other alleged error presented by defendants is their contention that the court did not instruct *236 the jury as to the effect of the judgment-roll in the Montgomery Estate Company case. The defendants contend that that case was controlling in the case now before the court. In this defendants are in error. The Montgomery Estate Company case involved different lumber and property.

We have carefully examined the entire record and find no reversible error. The instructions of the court to the jury were complete and so fair that defendants were pleased with them at the time they were given. The evidence was conflicting, and having been properly submitted to the jury and determined in favor of the plaintiff the judgment must be affirmed. It is so ordered. Affirmed. Rehearing Denied.

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Related

Howland v. Fenner Manufacturing Co.
252 P. 962 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1927)
Williams v. Pacific Surety Co.
139 P. 914 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1914)
Wicks v. Sanborn
159 P. 71 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1916)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
253 P. 529, 121 Or. 232, 1927 Ore. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elerath-steel-iron-co-v-cornfoot-or-1927.