Farmers' Product & Supply Co. v. Bond

1916 OK 944, 161 P. 181, 61 Okla. 244, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 870
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 14, 1916
Docket7835
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1916 OK 944 (Farmers' Product & Supply Co. v. Bond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers' Product & Supply Co. v. Bond, 1916 OK 944, 161 P. 181, 61 Okla. 244, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 870 (Okla. 1916).

Opinion

Opinion by

JOHNSON. (’.

Tliis was a suit by tlie Farmers’ Product & Supply Company, a corporation, plaintiff in error, against Albert Bond, defendant in error, to recover the sum of $974.32, damages for breach of a partly executed oral contract to sell wheat. Plaintiff alleged that or Tuly 11, 1914, defendant orally agreed to sell to plaintiff, and plaintiff agreed to buy of defendant, 4,000 bushels of wheat, at the price of 64 cents *245 per bushel, to be delivered on or before August 15, 1914; that the time of delivery was extended by agreement until September 1, 1915; and that defendant failed to deliver -,564 bushels of the wheat. Plaintiff sued for the difference between the contract price of the undelivered wheat, and its value at the time of the alleged breach of the contract. Defendant contended: (1) That after lie had delivered a part of the wheat, and prior to the final date for delivery under the contract, plaintiff refused to take any more-wheat from defendant and rescinded the contract, which was acquiesced in by defendant; and (2) that at the time of the making of the contract it was understood between the parties that he (defendant), in the sale of some 933 bushels of the contracted wheat, was not acting for himself, but as the agent of a third party; and that, if the court should find that the contract had not been abandoned by plaintiff, judgment should not be rendered against him for damages for a failure to deliver that part' of the wheat in reference to the sale of which he was acting only as an agent. The jury returned a general verdict for defendant, judgment was rendered accordingly, motion for new trial was overruled, and plaintiff appeals. The agency feature of defendant’s contention was not included in the original answer, but was inserted with leave of court by amendment during the. progress of the trial.

Dive of the specifications of error, argued by plaintiff in error, go to the allowance by the lower court during the trial of the amendment to the answer of defendant so as to set up the question of agency, and to the giving and refusal of instructions pertaining to the agency question. The amendment of the pleadings, and the giving and refusal of instructions, complained of. only pertained to the agency issue, and were not such matters as could have affected the consideration by the jury of the general issue of rescission of the contract by plaintiff. The two issues were entirely distinct. It the jury found that plaintiff had himself rescinded the contract, the question as to whether defendant acted as the agent for an other in the sale of a pirt of the wheat was necessarily eliminated from their consideration. The issue of agency only went to the measure, of damages, and could only have been (-'•ns’dered by the jury in arriving at the amount of damages, if they had first found for plaintiff upon the general issue of a breach of the contract by defendant. The verdict was a general one against plaintiff; and therefore the jury necessarily found that there had been no breach of contract by defendant as to any of the wheat; and the dissection of the contract into two parts, one pertaining to wheat sold by defendant in his own behalf and another to wheat sold by him as agent, was a province which it was not necessary or proper for the jury to invade. The acts of the lower court, complained of, and pertaining to the agency issue, therefore were without harm to the rights of the plaintiff; and if, in this connection, there be errors, they are without prejudice. Dunham v. Holloway, 3 Okla. 244, 41 Pac. 140; Wertz v. Barnard, 32 Okla. 426, 122 Pac. 649; Ploward v. Rose Township, 37 Okla. 153, 131 Pac. 683; Martin v. C., R. I. & P. R., 7 Okla. 452, 54 Pac. 696; Eddy v. La Fayette, 163 U. S. 456, 16 Sup. Ct. 1082, 41 L. Ed. 225.

Plaintiff in error contends that there was misconduct in defendant and his counsel in the manner of asking certain questions of one Thom, a witness for plainiififf; that the questions so asked were insinuating and in suiting to the witness, and tended unduly to discredit him before the jury; and that the court erred in its control of this examination.

It seems that, at the institution of the suit, the witness Thom had procured an attachment to be issued against the property of defendant and had sworn to the attachment affidavit, which was upon one of the printed forms in use in the state in such cases, which when not altered to fit the particular occasion, contains various charges of fraud, misdemeanor, and felony. In executing the af fidavit the witness made no change in its form ; and the affidavit, as sworn to by the witness, charged that the defendant was a foreign corporation, was converting his property in fraud of his creditors, had absconded with the intention to defraud his creditors, had committed a felony, had committed a misdemeanor and various acts of fraud, and that the suit was brought for damages arising from the seduction of a female. The su't was about wheat, and the defendant evidently resented his miscellaneous arraignment. Apparently this objection had some foundation The witness was not as careful in his oath to the affidavit as the circumstances evidently required. The grounds of attach ment and the testimonial conservativeness and scruple of the witness were issues in the case. The various blanket charges of the attachment affidavit were evidently too broad, and stated facts not true. Pull cross-examination of the witness with reference to the grounds of attachment w^s unquestionably permissible. The court exercised a control over the cross-examination, which was more *246 favorable to plaintiff than to defendant. Questions of defendant were excluded, which appear to ns to have been permissible; and we do not find any questions, permitted by the court, which exceeded the bounds of legitimate cross-examination. The manner of counsel in the examination does not appear in the record, but was passed upon by the lower court in its ruling upon the motion for a new trial. The lower court 'witnessed the proceedings, and we will not interfere with his estimate of them. We find no error in this assignment.

The next assignment of error is that the lower court erred in rejecting the testimony of two witnesses for plaintiff, to wit, that of one Clark and one Garriott.

Plaintiff in error does not point out any such rejection of the testimony of the witness Clark, nor does it discuss at all any such action of the court. Upon the other hand, the record indicates that this witness testified fully.

As to the witness Garriott, the record is not sufficient to sustain the assignment. When the witness was offered by plaintiff, being in rebuttal, the court stated that the examination of the witness would be restricted to the question of agency, and plaintiff excepted to this ruling. The court then stated that counsel might make his offers of testimony, and the offers would be passed upon; but that he would not permit the witness to be examined upon “this ink proposition,” although the offer of the testimony would be permitted. The court declined to allow plaintiff to make the offer of the testimony in open court in the presence of the jury, and requested counsel to reduce his offer to writing. which counsel stated he would do. Neither the brief of plaintiff in error, nor the record, discloses that counsel requested to be allowed to dictate the offer into the record in the absence of the jury, or that he made the offer in writing.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1916 OK 944, 161 P. 181, 61 Okla. 244, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 870, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-product-supply-co-v-bond-okla-1916.