Grant v. Milam

1908 OK 51, 95 P. 424, 20 Okla. 672, 1907 Okla. LEXIS 71
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 13, 1908
DocketNo. 1945. Okla. T.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 1908 OK 51 (Grant v. Milam) 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
Grant v. Milam, 1908 OK 51, 95 P. 424, 20 Okla. 672, 1907 Okla. LEXIS 71 (Okla. 1908).

Opinion

DüNN, J.

(after stating the facts as above). The plaintiff in this case pleads that be sold and delivered, and that defendants accepted from him under a parol, contract, a certain quantity of corn. The defendants filed, as answer, simply a general denial. These pleadings made the issue which was submitted to a jury. Evidence was offered by both parties, and is conflicting in the extreme.

The plaintiff and his witnesses testified that he was a farmer living near the town of Skedee, Oída. T., and having a quantity of com, something in excess of 10,000 bushels, which he desired to, sell, he met defendant Grant in the month of July, 1903, in the city of Pawnee, and sold him 10,000 bushels or more. That he “was to shell the cony and put it on the track at Skedee.” That he delivered all the corn as contracted for, putting it into the cars furnished him by the defendants or by their agent, located at Skedee, with the exception of one car load, which, owing to the lack of a car at the shipping point at the time the corn was loaded on the wagons ready to be placed in the car, was hauled to Pawnee and delivered to and received by the defendants at that place. That all the corn shipped was loaded into cars billed in the name of defendants by their agent at Skedee, two of them to Pawnee, one to Guthrie, and three to Purcell, to parties whose names were furnished plaintiff by the defendants, all of which plaintiff testified was in accordance with their agreement. That on one occasion the defendant Grant was at Skedee while the corn was being loaded, and two witnesses testify that he examined the corn and made the remark, that he thought the corn would lose him some money when he bought it, but he believed that it would save him a dollar or' two now, or save him something.” Plaintiff claimed that all of the corn sold, involved in this suit, was sold by him to the defendants; that he sold none of it to any one else, and that de *675 fendants received it. Defendants, on the other hand, show by their evidence that they did not purchase the corn from plaintiff, but simply agreed to find him buyers for his corn; that they were not responsible for its having been billed out of Skedee in their names; that their agent at Skedee had'no authority to receive any of this corn for them; that they aided plaintiff in getting cars and placing this corn merely as an act of accommodation and without charge; that they bought and paid him for some of this corn, using it themselves, but that it was on a separate and distinct contract from the one pleaded by plaintiff; that they paid him for all they received and did not owe him anything on the three cars shipped to Purcell, or any balance created otherwise.

Our statute provides (Wilson’s Rev. & Ann. St. 1903, § 780) that:

“The following contracts are invalid, unless the same, or some note or memorandum thereof, be in writing and subscribed by the party to be charged, or by his agent: * * * An agreement for the sale of goods, * * * at a price not less than fifty dollars, unless the buyer accept or receive part of such goods and chattels. * * *”

The contract being, then, within the statute of frauds, could not have been enforced, by the plaintiff or the defendant, nor could any damages or obligations have been predicated upon its breach by either of the parties unless á part of the goods were delivered by the plaintiff and received by the defendant. The question raised in the case at bar was whether or not, conceding the goods to have been sold and delivered by the plaintiff, they were received by the defendant.. For a mere delivery by plaintiff will not suffice to take the case out of the statute; there must be a receipt by the vendee. Jamison v. Simon, 68 Cal. 17, 8 Pac. 502; Stone v. Browning, 68 N. Y. 598 ;Shepherd v. Pressey, 32 N. H. 49; Dinnie v. Johnson, 8 N. D. 153, 77 N. W. 612; Jones v. Mechanics’ Bank of Baltimore, 29 Md. 287, 96 Am. Dec. 533.

As is shown above, in a recitation of the proof offered by the parties, there was a direct conflict in the evidence submitted to the *676 jury on this question, and in cases of this character the law is well settled that where there is a conflict in the evidence, and the trial court» fairly submits the issues raised by the pleadings, and the theories presented by the evidence in its instructions to the jury, if there is any competent evidence to support the verdict, appellate courts will not weigh the evidence and reverse the judgment, for that the verdict in the estimation of such court may not be in accordance with the weight of the evidence nor such as the court itself would have rendered. Eor, as was said by Judge Caldwell in the case of Gulf, C. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Ellis, 54 Fed. 481, 4 C. C. A. 454:

“In common-law actions tried to a jury this court cannot review or retry the facts. If there is any evidence, direct or circumstantial, fairly tending to support the verdict, it must stand. Ever)» presumption is in its’ favor, and all doubts must be resolved in its favor. This court will not weigh nor balance the evidence. * * * It was because the people thought the judges were poor judges of the facts that they committed their decision to a jury. Undoubtedly juries sometimes err in deciding the facts, but their errors are trifling in number and extent compared with the errors of the judges in deciding the law. The numerous appellate courts of the country are engaged principally in correcting their own and the errors of other courts on questions of law. The mistakes of juries take up very little space, comparatively, in the enormous volume of law reports with which the country is being deluged. In their deliberations upon the facts of the case they are at liberty to exercise their common sense and practical experience and knowledge of human affairs, untrammeled by the excessive subtility, over-refinement, and the hair-splitting of the schoolmen which have crept into the administration of the law by the courts to such an extent as to sometimes bring it into reproach. It is not by such modes of reasoning that the soundness of a verdict of a jury is to be tested. It is not, therefore, any ground for disturbing the verdict of a jury that the court would not have rendered such a verdict. It must appear that all reasonable men would agree that it was not supported by the evidence, and should be annulled. • The constitutional right of the citizen to have the facts of his case tried by a jury must not be encroached upon by the courts under any pretext.”

In the case at bar, the defendants and their witnesses testified *677 fully and denied specifically the evidence given to support the contract alleged in plaintiffs petition; denied that they bought the corn from the plaintiff, and that they ever received it under the contract pleaded. This having been submitted to the jury, and it with all the parties, witnesses, and evidence before it having found in favor of the plaintiff, and this court not being able to say that there is no “evidence direct or circumstantial fairly tending to support the verdict, it must stand.”

The question now arises, were the theories of the parties fairly submitted to the jury by the instructions P Defendants in their brief insist that they were not, and quote instruction No.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1908 OK 51, 95 P. 424, 20 Okla. 672, 1907 Okla. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grant-v-milam-okla-1908.