Hirshfield v. Waldron

47 N.W. 239, 83 Mich. 116, 1890 Mich. LEXIS 914
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 14, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 47 N.W. 239 (Hirshfield v. Waldron) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hirshfield v. Waldron, 47 N.W. 239, 83 Mich. 116, 1890 Mich. LEXIS 914 (Mich. 1890).

Opinion

Champlin, C. J.

On November 29, 1884, the plaintiff liad a clothing store in the city of Muskegon. On that <lay, the defendant, who was a married woman living with her husband, came into his place of business with their only son, and picked out a coat and vest for the boy. She 'wanted, an entire suit of clothes, but plaintiff did not have in stock any pants of the right size. The price of the coat and vest was $15.50.

The plaintiff claimed on the trial that he had known the defendant for a number of years before that time, and knew that she was the wife of L. A. Waldron, and that she was living with him at that time, and that the boy was the only son of defendant and her husband, and that the coat and vest were for the boy, Leonard, Jr. Plaintiff testified in his own behalf in the court below that when Mrs. Waldron came into the store and picked out the suit of clothes, and ascertained the price, she purchased the coat and vest, and told him to charge them to her, and she would pay it in a day or two, or within [118]*118a few days, and that he did make the charge against her upon his blotter at that time. Upon cross-examination he was asked to repeat the language which she made use of, and he said that Mrs. Waldron said: “Charge it tome, and I will come in and pay it to you in a day or two.” Upon further interrogation he testified that she did not say, “Charge it to me individually,” but, “ Charge-it to me.”

Mrs. Waldron was a witness in her own behalf, and testified to purchasing the goods at plaintiff’s store, and further testified as follows:

“ My son wanted a suit of clothes, and I went to Mr. Waldron and asked him where I should go to get them, and he said: ‘Mr. Ilirshfield is owing me,’ and I said I would go into Mr. Hirshfield’s and get them, and I went into Hirshfield’s and got them, and there wasn’t anything said about charging them. I never told him to charge-them to me or anybody else, and I took the clothes and went home. I never heard anything about it again until 1888, I think. In the mean time he had asked Mr.. Waldron for it several times.
“Mr. Delano. I object to that.
Q. You were not present?
“A. I was not.
“The GoiítL Well, I think that had better go out-then.
“A. And that is all I know about it. I don’t know anything more about it. When I went into the store afterwar/ds, I think it was just before he sued me, I went, into the store, and had a talk with him. And I said, ‘Mr. Hirshfield, you know that I - didn’t tell you to charge those goods to me.’ And he said ‘I know you didn’t, and that is just the reason I am going to collect it of you.’ At the time I got the clothes I had not one cent in my own name, and I never had gone to any store in this town and had anything charged to me. And that’s all I know about it.”

The plaintiff also produced the blotter upon which the charge was made, and was cross-examined by the defendant’s counsel- as to that entry, and from his questioning, [119]*119and the position of the “Mrs.” prefixed to Mrs. Waldron’s name, he sought to show by the witness that that prefix was written after the original charge was made. It appears from the testimony that the prefix “Mrs.” was in the margin of the book made by the red lines. Plaintiff was asked to show other entries where charges were partially in the margin, and he pointed out several.

At the conclusion of the testimony, the defendant’s attorney requested the court to instruct the jury as follows:

“Before you can find for the plaintiff, you must be satisfied from the evidence, and that by a fair preponderance, that Mrs. Waldron told plaintiff to charge the goods to her individually, and that she would pay for them, and that plaintiff gave her the credit at the time. It is not sufficient that she got the goods from Hirshfield unless she ordered them charged as I have before stated.”

And the court immediately proceeded to instruct the jury substantially in accordance with the request in the following language:

“ Gentlemen, there is one request that has been handed up which I will give you. Before you can find for plaintiff you must be satisfied from the evidence, and by a fair preponderance of it, that Mrs. Waldron, told plaintiff to charge the goods to her, and that she would pay for them, and that plaintiff gave her the credit at the time. It is not sufficient that she got the goods from Hirshfield unless she ordered them charged as I have before stated.”

He further instructed the jury as follows:

“Gentlemen, that is all the point there is in this case. There is no dispute but what the goods were obtained, and that Mrs. Waldron got them, and for her son, who was with her. It is simply a question of whether she told Mr. Hirshfield then to charge the goods to her, and that she would pay for them, as he says she did, or whether she did not, as she claims she did not. Now it is for you to weigh all this evidence upon that point. It [120]*120was competent for her, although she was a married woman, to go in there and buy goods in that way for her son; and if she told him to charge the goods to her, and that she would be in in a day or two to pay for them, she would be bound to pay for them in law. If she did not, but simply went in and got the goods, and said, Charge them/ why then she would not.”

The defendant's attorneys have assigned error upon the refusal of the court to charge the jury in the language of their request. We fail to perceive the force of the distinction between the statement made by such person purchasing goods,—“You may charge it to me,” or “You may charge it to me individually.”

Defendant's counsel alleged as error the following question put to the witness Hirshfield:

“ Prior to this time, you had undertaken to collect a claim against Waldron that had been standing for some years, hadn't you?”

We see no error in permitting this question to be asked and answered. It was material to show that the credit was not extended to the husband, but to the wife, and this testimony would have some bearing in that direction.

The second assignment of error relates to the ruling of the court in permitting the following question:

“Now, if Mrs. Waldron had asked you to charge this coat and vest to her husband, L. A. Waldron, would you have done it?”

And the third assignment of error may be said in this respect to be the same as the last, and related to the following question:

“ That claim that you speak of that you tried to collect of him was litigated in this court, and taken to the Supreme Court, wasn't it?”

We think this was relevant. The testimony tends to explain the relation of the parties, and to substantiate [121]*121the testimony of the plaintiff that he did not extend the credit to Mr. Waldron.

The fourth assignment of error relates to the ruling of the court in permitting the following question to be asked defendant on her cross-examination:

“Now, about that time, your husband, Waldron, wasn’t paying anybody, was he?”

There was no error in this ruling.

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Bluebook (online)
47 N.W. 239, 83 Mich. 116, 1890 Mich. LEXIS 914, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hirshfield-v-waldron-mich-1890.