Fleishman v. Meyer

80 P. 209, 46 Or. 267, 1905 Ore. LEXIS 36
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 3, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 80 P. 209 (Fleishman v. Meyer) 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
Fleishman v. Meyer, 80 P. 209, 46 Or. 267, 1905 Ore. LEXIS 36 (Or. 1905).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Moore

delivered the opinion.

1. The sufficiency of the answer was not challenged by motion or demurrer, but, after the jury were impaneled, plaintiffs’ counsel, insisting that such pleading contained several defenses not separately stated, orally requested the court to require defendants to elect upon which one they would rely at the trial; but, the application having been denied, an exception was saved, and it is maintained that an error was thereby _ committed. The statute [270]*270permits a defendant to set forth by answer as many defenses as he may have, but they must be separately stated, and refer to the cause of action to which they are intended to apply: B. & C. Comp. § 74. “The statute,” says a text-writer, “while permitting several defenses and several counterclaims, requires them to be separately stated; and, if a single statement contains one defense, followed by allegations that will constitute another, the latter should be stricken out”: Bliss, Code Pl. (3 ed.), § 424. A motion to' strike out a pleading because several causes of defense therein are not separately stated must be made within the time required for answering such pleading: B. & C. Comp. § 81. In construing this section it was held in United States v. Ordway (C. C.), 30 Fed. 30, that a defect in an answer in which distinct defenses were not separately stated was waived by demurring thereto on that ground. In the case at bar, plaintiffs’ counsel, by denying in their reply the allegations of new matter in the answer, thereby waived any defect therein based on the ground alleged.

2. Besides, a defendant can be required to elect on which of several defenses he will rely only where the facts stated therein are so inconsistent that, if the truth of one defense be admitted, it will necessarily disprove another: Pavey v. Pavey, 30 Ohio St. 600; Cox v. Cox, 26 Pa. St. 375 (67 Am. Dec. 432). If it be admitted that the answer set out more than one defense, the averments therein are not so inconsistent as to compel an election.

3. Contracts are usually entered into with the tacit understanding of- the parties that the ordinary methods of executing the terms of their agreement will be pursued: Johnston v. Barrills, 27 Or. 251 (41 Pac. 656, 50 Am. St. Rep. 717). Though by invoking tipis rule it might reasonably be inferred that the parties to this action understood that the bark in question would ordinarily be shipped down the Siuslaw River and bay to the Pacific Ocean, and thence to San Francisco, the interruption of navigation on any part of the way does not destroy the possibility of transporting the bark to its destination", for it might have been hauled in wagons from M|apleton to Eugene, a distance of about 80 miles, and thence carried by rail to San Francisco. The pos[271]*271sibility of executing the contract in the manner last indicated demonstrates that the inability of a vessel to cross the Siuslaw bar, by reason of the storms that prevailed prior to and on October 1, 1903, when the bark should have been delivered in San Francisco, was not such a dispensation as would excuse defendants from performing the terms -of their agreement, or exempt them from liability in an action instituted to recover the damages sustained by reason of their breach of the contract: Pengra v. Wheeler, 24 Or. 532 (34 Pac. 354, 21 L. R. A. 726); Reid v. Alaska Packing Co. 43 Or. 429 (73 Pac. 337); Anderson v. Adams, 43 Or. 621 (74 Pac. 215). The trial court evidently adopted this view, for, in charging the jury, they were told, in effect, that, unless the original- contract stipulated that the inability to transport the bark by water would justify a violation of the agreement, the nonperformance of its terms by reason of the interruption of navigation afforded no defense to the action.

4. An examination of the answer will show that the principal fact therein stated to defeat a recovery against the defendants is the alleged modified agreement, whereby it is averred that plaintiffs were to accept two and one half tons of bark in lieu of the quantity stipulated for in the original contract. If the modification was consummated as alleged, the delivery of the bark, admitted to have been received, constituted a complete defense to the action. The statement of facts, preceding the averment of the modification, in relation to the condition of the bar at the entrance of the Siuslaw Bay, constitutes a history of the transaction which naturally precedes and logically leads up to the gravamen of the defense, forming mere matters of inducement that should be pleaded to enable the court to determine whether or not a prima facie ease was presented; but the facts thus stated are not deemed material and need not be denied: Gardner v. McWilliams, 42 Or. 14 (69 Pac. 915).

5. Instead of ignoring the narrative constituting the alleged inducement, plaintiffs, in their reply, denied the statement thereof, and, over their objection and exception, testimony was introduced tending to show the condition of the Siuslaw bar, thus presenting to the jury an immaterial matter that was well calculated to divert their attention and possibly induce a verdict, [272]*272notwithstanding the court’s instruction in relation to the alleged dispensation. The error of which plaintiffs complain in this respect thus seems to have been invited by their own pleading. If, however, the condition of the bar was alleged as tending to show an act of God, to excuse a performance of the terms of the agreement, the facts stated are insufficient to constitute a defense of that kind, and the answer should have been corrected in this respect by a seasonable application to the court for that purpose.

6. In view of the conclusion we have reached on another branch of the case, it has been deemed proper briefly to detail the. state of the pleadings, so that, in case another trial is had, the jury may not possibly be misled in the manner indicated. Plaintiffs’ counsel requested the court to charge the jury as follows :

“I instruct you that an attorney at law, in the absence of express authorization thereunto, has no authority whatever to compromise or settle a claim for his client. So, if you find from the evidence that the defendants wrote to Heller & Powers, then acting as plaintiffs’ attorneys, offering less bark than that required by the contract in evidence, and that Heller & Powers replied thereto and undertook to accept the same, that does not bind the plaintiffs in this action as upon a compromise or settlement for such less amount of bark, unless you can find from the evidence the authority and power conferred upon Heller & Powers by the plaintiffs so to do.”

The court having refused to give the. instruction so requested; an exception was saved, and it is conténded by plaintiffs’ counsel that the action in this respect was erroneous. The bill of exceptions shows that, to enforce the payment of their claim for damages resulting from an alleged breach of the agreement, plaintiffs employed a firm of attorneys, to whom defendants wrote a letter, of which the following is a copy, to wit:

“Eugene, Oregon, October 21, 1903.
Messrs. Holler & Powers, 1
San Francisco, Cal.—

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Bluebook (online)
80 P. 209, 46 Or. 267, 1905 Ore. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fleishman-v-meyer-or-1905.