Fein v. Davis

2 Wyo. 118
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2 Wyo. 118 (Fein v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fein v. Davis, 2 Wyo. 118 (Wyo. 1879).

Opinion

Peck, J.

We sustain without comment the order of the district court, denying the motion to quash the summons. The action was brought by Davis in assumpsit for work and labor done, and materials furnished by him in building a house for Fein: to which the latter plead the general denial and payment. Upon the trial Davis introduced evidence tending to make out a case, and rested: Fein was called as a witness for the defense, and asked whether the house was or was not built for a sum certain on a certain verbal contract made between himself and Davis before'the work upon it was commenced. The question was objected to as irrelevant and incompetent, was excluded, and an exception [120]*120taken. Tbe question was leading, because it embodied a material fact, and alternative enquiries, each of which, admitted of an answer by a simple affirmative or negative; it was relevant, but incompetent. Moreover, the witness had already stated precisely what the question called for, except that his statement did not in terms show whether the contract was verbal; with that exception it was a complete answer, and the question was purely repetition; this rendered the question incompetent, because it purposed to burden the case with useless matter: it could have availed the defendant, only as seeking to prove directly, what that statement fully implied, namely, that the contract was verbal; but, to accomplish that, the enquiry should simply have asked for the form of the contract, or (with the consent of the court or adversary) as a leading one — whether it was verbal or written. But the additional evidence would only have been cumulative; and, as long as the implication was undisturbed by adversary evidence, it was discretionary with the court to allow or disallow such testimony in advance, whether objected to or not. There was therefore good ground for rejecting the question, and it is immaterial upon what mental operation it was done.

The defendant below requested the court to instruct the jury imperatively to find specially upon certain points, the court declined so to charge, but stated the proposed findings to them, instructing them that they might return a verdict, finding or not finding upon the points according to their discretion; and to this instructing, so leaving it to the discretion of the jury, he excepted.

The instruction excepted to complied with the statute, and is sustained.

The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff below; the defendant moved for a new trial on .the grounds that it was rendered without sufficient evidence, under, prejudice, and against law. The motion was overruled, and an exception taken. To be unsustained by evidence, the verdict must have been against the weight off evidence in the sense of [121]*121tlie ruler which we stated and explained in the case of the Hilliard Flume and Lumber Co. v. Woods, 1 Wyo., 396; there was much conflict in the evidence, and we cannot say that the verdict violates that rule. The petition declares only for labor and materials; under it a bill of particulars was filed, amounting to $215.50, of which $214.50 were for labor and materials, and $1.00 for cash paid for expressage; $50 are credited upon the bill, leaving a balance of $165.50. A bill of particulars can limit, not enlarge the claim, alleged in the pleading, under which it is filed; had the verdict been for the full amount of this balance, it would have been unsustained, and so excessive as to the $1.00; but as it was less than the balance by more than that sum, the jury were instructed in effect that the plaintiff could recover only for labor and materials, and the legal inference is, that, obeying the charge, they found only for labor and materials. There is nothing to indicate that the verdict was returned under prejudice. The suit was, also, for the enforcement of a mechanic’s lien against the house for the labor and materials in question. While testifying in chief, in the course of his opening, Davis read to the jury, in evidence, what is called in the case a notice of lien, consisting of a description of the property, on which the lien was claimed, and the above-mentioned statement of amount, both which had been filed with the petition, and made parts of it by reference. The defendant objected to the reading of them, on the ground of irrelevancy and incompetency, and that they did not tend to prove any issue that was before the jury; and excepted to the decision allowing them to be read. The objection, as an objection to the documents being used in evidence before the jury, was sound in part. Whether the court should, or should not, have entertained the branch of the suit relating to the alleged lien, the account was the basis of the main issue, and the reading of the bill of particulars was proper for the better understanding by the jury of the evidence which was adduced in explanation and support of the account, and as to this the objection was not [122]*122well taken; but the issue as to the account alone was before the jury, the description of the property sought to be charged with a lien, had no tendency to establish this issue, was irrelevant to it, and therefore, incompetent as evidence upon it, and to the reading of this document the objection was well taken; but from the nature of its irrelevancy, the reading of the document could not have affected the mind of the jury; if the court should have entertained this branch of the case, the description, accompanied by proof of verity, must necessarily have been read in evidence by Davis in the jury’s hearing, because it was evidence to be addressed to the court in support of the alleged lien (provided, its competency was not lost by its withdrawal from the register’s office — a circumstance which is mentioned below, and which does not affect the present question) though methodically it should have been so read, after all the evidence going to the jury had been introduced, inasmuch as the principal claim had to be established, before the eollat-teral claim was reached; moreover, the main issue alone, and no point relating to the alleged lien was submitted to the jury, and the latter found only upon the main issue; hence the reading of the description to the jury could not have affected the verdict or result, was a harmless error, and is not a ground for a,reversal.

This disposes of all the objections which are presented by the record upon the primary part of the case. We therefore find no error of fact or law in the verdict; nor any error in the judgment rendered below, so far as it is a general and personal judgment, and, to that extent we affirm it.

The district court has full jurisdiction upon its law side to administer a mechanic’s lien; the explicitness of the statute to this effect obviates the necessity of exposition. But the court below acquired no jurisdiction to administer one in this case. The petition, by way of presenting to it a subject-matter — having set forth the claim for labor and materials, alleged, “ Said labor being done, and materials furnished upon a certain dwelling house of the defendant, de[123]*123scribed as being one and one-half story log dwelling house, situate on the southeast quarter of the southeast quarter of section number four, township number fifteen, range number seventy-three west, and claimed by the defendant,

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Bluebook (online)
2 Wyo. 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fein-v-davis-wyo-1879.