KLEMGARD v. Wade Seed Co.

342 P.2d 757, 217 Or. 409, 1959 Ore. LEXIS 372
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 29, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 342 P.2d 757 (KLEMGARD v. Wade Seed Co.) 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
KLEMGARD v. Wade Seed Co., 342 P.2d 757, 217 Or. 409, 1959 Ore. LEXIS 372 (Or. 1959).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiffs from a judgment which the circuit court entered in favor of the defend *411 ant after the jury had returned a verdict for that party. The plaintiffs, two in number, constitute a partnership which is engaged in the business of buying and selling seed peas. The defendant, which is a corporation, grows, sells and cleans seed peas. In 1956 the plaintiffs delivered to the defendant 31,220 pounds -of seed peas and the defendant agreed to use some of that quantity in planting land which it held and thereby raise a crop of seed peas and deliver the remainder to other growers who would likewise raise crops of seed peas. In turn, defendant, as the plaintiffs’ agent, was to purchase the crops of seed peas thus grown. October 3, 1956, the plaintiffs advanced to the defendant the sum of $8,500 to be expended by the defendant, as the plaintiffs’ agent, (1) in the purchase of the crops of the growers who had received the 31,220 pounds of seed peas which we have mentioned and (2) to defray the defendant’s expenses in cleaning the harvested crops and performing incidental services. When the defendant purchased the crops from the growers there was to be credited upon the purchase price the value of the seed peas that had been delivered to them and also the amounts of the advances that they had received out of the aforementioned sum of $8,500.

After the crops had been harvested controversies arose between the plaintiffs and the defendant as to (1) the disposition which the defendant had made of the $8,500, (2) the grade of some of the peas which had been harvested and (3) the charges which the defendant made for its services in cleaning the peas. Presently this action was filed which was based upon charges that: (1) the defendant did not pay the entire sum of $8,500 to growers and refused to return it to the plaintiffs upon the latter’s demand, (2) the plaintiffs au *412 thorized the defendant to sell 7,200 pounds of peas and that it did so for the sum of $468 but refused to pay that sum to the plaintiffs and (3) the plaintiffs authorized the defendant to sell 3,445 pounds of screenings for $64.35 and that it did so but refused to pay that sum to the plaintiffs. The complaint acknowledged that the defendant was entitled to a credit of $4,641.98 on the sum of $8,500 which the plaintiff had advanced to it. The plaintiffs sought judgment in the sums of $3,858.02 ($8,500.00 less $4,641.98), $468.00 and $64.35.

The answer set forth the disposition which the defendant says that it made of the $8,500 and averred that nothing was due to the plaintiffs.

The plaintiffs present nine assignments of error.

The first assignment of error is based upon a ruling which sustained the defendant’s objection to the admissibility of a paper entitled Purchase Report which the plaintiffs sought to have admitted. The Purchase Report was a printed sheet prepared by the plaintiffs with various printed headings adjacent to which there was space for the making of entries. Seemingly, the Purchase Report came in book form so that the plaintiffs’ representative, after making the entries, could tear a copy from the book and deliver it to the other party to the transaction. In the present Instance the Purchase Report with its entries assumed the form of a memorandum of the receipt by the defendant of the seed peas aforementioned and contained some pertinent data or figures pertaining to the peas and their delivery to the defendant. The entries were made by E. A. Dumas, one of the two plaintiffs. When he made the entries Dumas used three of the forms and by placing sheets of carbon paper between them, both as he wrote the entries and as he and the defendant’s *413 manager signed, produced triplicate originals. After the parties had signed, Dumas handed one of the triplicates to the defendant’s manager and kept the other two. When the plaintiffs offered in evidence one of the triplicates which Dumas had retained the defendant produced its triplicate original and thereupon by comparison of the two papers it developed that the plaintiffs’ triplicate contained a paragraph written by Dumas that was not upon the defendant’s. It was that paragraph which the plaintiffs most desired to have introduced in evidence. An explanation given by the plaintiffs indicated that after Dumas had handed to the defendant’s manager one of the triplicate originals some more discussion took place between the two men and thereupon Dumas wrote its essence upon his triplicate original but not upon the defendant’s. We have mentioned the fact that before that writing was done both Dumas and defendant’s manager had signed the paper. The defendant, after objecting to the receipt in evidence of the plaintiffs’ triplicate original, expressed a willingness for the triplicate which it (defendant) possessed to be received in evidence. The plaintiffs did not contest the verity of the triplicate which the defendant produced, and conceded that the triplicate which the plaintiffs offered contained entries which Dumas wrote after the defendant had signed it. The plaintiffs rejected the defendant’s proposal.

We think that it is evident that no error was committed when the challenged ruling was made. The unilateral entry upon the plaintiffs’ triplicate original which was written by Dumas after the defendant had signed the paper did not ingraft into the agreement Dumas’ writing. The paragraph which Dumas wrote upon his triplicate was his own personal memrandum *414 but was not a part of the parties’ undertaking. This assignment of error is without merit.

The second assignment of error is based upon a ruling which permitted the defendant to introduce as evidence the original complaint filed by the plaintiffs. That pleading had been superseded by three later versions of the plaintiffs’ cause of action in the form of Amended, First Amended and Second Amended Complaints. The objection to the tendered abandoned pleading (original complaint) was:

“It isn’t admissible because of an Amended Complaint being filed previous to that time, and not documentary evidence of any sort.”

Defendant’s counsel stated that he offered the pleading as “impeaching the testimony of the plaintiff and showing that their claims at that time were entirely different than the claim they are making now.”

A previous paragraph of this opinion sets forth the sums for which the plaintiffs sought judgment in the present complaint (Second Amended Complaint). The original complaint, which is the subject matter of the assignment of error now under consideration, gave a somewhat different version of plaintiffs’ cause of action and, after crediting the defendant with $6,297.32 sought judgment for $3,001.34, $1,389.03 less than the Second Amended Complaint.

Although a pleading loses its status as such when it is superseded by an amended one, it never vanishes from the files. If it contains something adverse to the pleader’s position it is always available for introduction as an item of evidence. The observation just made is so well established in this state that it is unnecessary to cite authorities. The second assignment of error is clearly lacking in merit.

Assignments of Error No. 3, 3-A, 3-B, 3-C and 3-D

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Bluebook (online)
342 P.2d 757, 217 Or. 409, 1959 Ore. LEXIS 372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klemgard-v-wade-seed-co-or-1959.