Johnson v. Husband

22 Kan. 277
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 22 Kan. 277 (Johnson v. Husband) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Husband, 22 Kan. 277 (kan 1879).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Valentine, J.:

This action was brought April 24,1877,. by J. C. Johnson against E. Husband and W. A. Short, on a promissory note for $170, dated July 22, 1876, due October 1, 1876, payable to the order of Platter & Crew, indorsed,, when made, by Short, and indorsed on August 20, 1876, by Platter & Crew to the plaintiff Johnson.

The defendants set forth in their answer, as a defense to-the action, that the only consideration for said note was two-horses purchased by Husband of said J. C. Johnson and ~W. V. Platter, and N. S. Crew; that the horses were purchased for work on Husband’s farm, which the vendors at the-time well knew, and stated that the horses were all right (except a cold), which statement Husband relied upon, and in consideration thereof made the purchase; that the horses, however,, were not all right, that they had a contagious disease which-rendered them worthless, which the vendors at the time well knew, and which Husband did not know; that said horses communicated said disease to a large number of other horses belonging to Husband, which rendered those other horses also-worthless; that Husband expended a large amount of time, money and labor in doctoring and taking care of these horses r [281]*281and that he sustained damages by reason of the foregoing facts to the amount in the aggregate of $2,500, for which amount he asked judgment. The defendants also set forth in their answer that Short signed said note as a guarantor only,, and that he did not receive any part of the consideration for the note. The plaintiff’s reply was a general denial. A trial was had before the court and a jury, and the verdict and judgment were rendered in favor of the defendant Husband, and against the plaintiff, for $781.73 and costs. To reverse this judgment, the plaintiff now brings the case to this court, on petition in error.

The record is voluminous, and many questions are raised, but we hardly suppose that it is expected that we shall go' into elaborate detail in the discussion of, all of them.

The plaintiff claims that the court below committed material error in the admission and rejection of testimony. Whether it did or not, we shall not stop to inquire, but shall pass to the next questions.

The plaintiff also claims that the court erred in its instructions to the jury. Neither shall we stop to consider this question. Eor, even if the court did err as is claimed, we would think that, with the view the jury took of the case, the error was immaterial.

[282]*282i verdict- modiquestionsafulaT fact; answers. [281]*281The plaintiff also claims that the court below erred with reference to the special findings of the jury. This question we shall examine more at length. It appeared on the trial of the case in the court below, that said horses were sold by Johnson, Platter and Crew to Husband, on July 22, 1876, for $320, and that Husband gave two promissory notes therefor, one of which he afterward paid, and the other is the one now sued on. The plaintiff admitted on the trial that said horses were diseased at the time of said sale, and that the vendors knew it. He admitted that the horses had a cold, and that they also had the distemper, and that the distemper was and is á contagious disease, and that the vendors at the time of the sale well knew all of these things. But he claimed that Husband also knew these facts; that Husband [282]*282himself carefully examined the horses, and that he was also informed by the vendors and by other persons that the horses not only had a cold, but that they also had the distemper. Husband, however, claimed at the trial that the disease which the horses had at the time of the sale was worse than a cold, and worse than the distemper, and that the vendors knew it, but that they falsely and fraudulently represented and stated that the horses had nothing worse than a cold. Therefore, whether the horses had at the time of the sale some disease worse than the distemper, and whether the vendors knew it at that time, or not, were two very important questions of fact in the case. For the purpose of ascertaining the opinion of the jury upon these questions, the plaintiff requested the court to submit to the jury the following special questions, to wit: “ 1. What, if any, disease did the horses have at the time of sale ? 2. Did the sellers know what disease the horses had when sold?” The court below submitted the first of these questions to the jury, but refused the second, and in lieu thereof gave the jury the following: “Did the sellers know that the horses had, when sold, any disease?” To which the plaintiff duly excepted. The jury returned a general verdict in favor of the defendants, and answered said special questions as follows: To the first they answered, “A contagious disease;” to the second they answered, “Yes.” “The plaintiff objected to the answer of the jury upon the first particular question of fact submitted being received, as not responsive to the question, and requested the court to direct the jury to state specifically the name of the disease, or if they could not do that, then to state whether it was the disease known as distemper, or something else; which the court refused to do, and ordered the verdict and special findings to be filed by the clerk, and discharged the jury” — to all of which the plaintiff duly excepted. We think the court below erred. By this action of

^e court and jury the plaintiff was deprived of a substantial right given him by the statutes; (Laws of 1874, ch. 91 pp. 140, 141 § 1; Bent v. Philbrick, 16 Kas. 190; Cent. Branch U. P. Rld. Co. v. Hotham, [283]*283ante, p. 41;) and by tbis action of the court and jury nothing was found by these two special findings, except what had already been admitted by the plaintiff himself on the trial. The plaintiff had the right to have special questions of fact submitted to the jury, and proper answers given to them — answers which would mean something in the case, and not such as would be merely a reiteration of what the plaintiff had already admitted. The answers should be such as would settle some disputed question between the parties.

The plaintiff also claims that the verdict of the jury for $781.73, damages, was the result of marking, aggregation and division, and that the verdict was procured in that manner in pursuance of a previous agreement to that effect made by the jury. On the motion for a new trial, the plaintiff read in evidence the affidavit of George Geisler,, one of the jurors, which affidavit states as follows:

“That the jury, in order to arrive at the amount of damages to be allowed to said defendant Husband, mutually agreed that each juror should set down such amount as he thought said Husband should recover for each separate item of damage claimed; that the several amounts thus obtained should be added together, the aggregated sum divided by twelve, and that the quotient thus obtained should be taken and accepted as the amount to be returned in the verdict of the jury 'as the damages sustained by the said Husband; . . . that such agreement was carried out, and the amount of damages returned by the jury in their verdict was obtained by such addition and division, and the quotient obtained was in all cases abided by on the part of said jury.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 Kan. 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-husband-kan-1879.