Kramer v. Northwestern Elevator Co.

106 N.W. 86, 97 Minn. 44, 1906 Minn. LEXIS 645
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 5, 1906
DocketNos. 14,548—(78)
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 106 N.W. 86 (Kramer v. Northwestern Elevator Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kramer v. Northwestern Elevator Co., 106 N.W. 86, 97 Minn. 44, 1906 Minn. LEXIS 645 (Mich. 1906).

Opinion

ELLIOTT, J.

This case was in this court once before upon an appeal from an order denying the defendant’s motion for a new trial, and a new trial was ordered. 91 Minn. 346, 98 N. W. 96. After a retrial and a verdict in favor of the defendant, the case now comes here on appeal from an order denying plaintiff’s motion for a new trial.

From 1891 to 1901 the defendant corporation was conducting an elevator business at Clara City, in this state, and in various other places along the railway line. For some time prior to 1901 the plaintiff had been farming near Clara City, and had marketed practically all of his wheat at the defendant’s elevator. This elevator was in charge of a party by the name of Keeley, who was the agent of defendant. Under his instructions from his principal, it was the duty of Keeley to give to parties delivering grain at the elevator a warehouse receipt and make daily reports of his business to his principal. It appears, however, that when the plaintiff delivered wheat at the elevator Keeley, instead of giving him a regular warehouse receipt, was in the habit of delivering a memorandum made on any loose slip of paper which was convenient. Plaintiff received these slips and placed them in a box in his trunk at home, and whenever he wished to sell any wheat he took the slips from the box at random and presented them to Keeley, and received the market price of the wheat at that time without any reduction for storage charges. Occasionally the plaintiff received money from the agent without delivering slips, and he then authorized Keeley, whenever he needed money, to sell enough wheat to reimburse himself for the advances thus made. There seems, also, to have been some arrangement by which the plaintiff’s wheat was to be reported to the company as sold at a higher price than the market justified. Although it was Keeley’s duty to make daily reports to the company of all wheat re[46]*46ceived, he never reported grain received from plaintiff until it was actually sold and the money paid to the plaintiff out of the cash belonging to the company. At that time a warehouse receipt was made out in the usual form, showing that the wheat was received and paid for on that date, marked “Cancelled,” and sent to the company with the daily report.

The complaint alleged that the plaintiff had between February 1, 1899, and April 15, 1901, delivered and deposited with the defendant twelve hundred sixty bushels of wheat, and that the defendant accepted the wheat and agreed to purchase and pay for the same on demand at the then market price; that demand had been made and that payment had been refused; and that defendant denied that any grain had been received. The answer was a general denial.

On the first trial the defendant attempted to show that these slips which were issued in the place of warehouse receipts were issued in pursuance of a general scheme devised by the plaintiff and the defendant’s agent to defraud the defendant out of its storage charges and require it to pay for grain which it had never received. The plaintiff contended that fraud was not in issue under the pleadings, and the evidence directed to this issue was excluded on the first trial. In the decision on the former appeal it was said that the defendant had attempted to show that there had been a fraudulent scheme to deprive it of storage charges, but that this issue was not presented by the pleadings. It was suggested that under the general denial the defendant might have been permitted to show that a fraudulent agreement was entered ■into between the plaintiff and defendant’s agent, and that the tickets were issued in pursuance to this agreement, and therefore did not represent actual wheat. Fraud of any other character wa's then not an issue. When the case came to trial the second time the only issue was, did the slips represent wheat which had been delivered to the defendant and not paid for? But the defendant again offered the evidence tending to show fraud, which had been excluded at the former trial, and it was received.

1. The first seventeen assignments predicate error .upon the ruling of the trial court in the admission of this evidence, on the theory that the former opinion of this court determined its inadmissibility. This [47]*47record discloses that certain evidence tending to show why the plaintiff had taken the slips, rather than storage receipts, and the manner in which the defendant made its profits in running elevators, was excluded at the first trial and was received on the second trial. There is no doubt that an issue determined on an appeal will not be re-examined on a second appeal in the same case. The law as determined on the first appeal is the law of the case on the second appeal of the same case. But it is only questions that are decided which become the law of the case. The first appeal in this case was taken by the defendant, and' the exclusion of the evidence in question was assigned as error. An examination of the former decision will show very clearly that the contention of the plaintiff cannot be sustained without an undue extension and improper application of what is known as the law of the case. The sufficiency of the complaint, the admissibility of the slips, the necessity for a bill of particulars, and the alleged improper remark of the court all received some attention, and a new trial was ordered because of an improper and prejudicial remark by the trial court in the presence of the jury. The correctness of the rulings excluding the evidence which was admitted at the second trial was not considered or determined, and therefore the doctrine of the law of the case has no application.

2. The assignments of error numbered eighteen to thirty-one, inclusive, relate largely to the improper reception of evidence. The defendant’s evidence on the second trial was directed to two distinct issues: (1) That, if any grain had been delivered into the elevator, it had been delivered under such circumstances of fraud and unlawful purpose as to deprive the plaintiff of any right of action against the defendant; and (2) that the plaintiff had been paid for all the grain deposited by him in the elevator. The evidence which the plaintiff contends was improperly received was directed to the issue of fraud. After it was received, the trial court evidently became convinced that it was not sufficient to establish fraud, and the issue was withdrawn from the jury. The only question submitted was whether the plaintiff had deposited any grain in defendant’s elevator for which he had not been paid. It is evident that the court during the trial proceeded upon the theory that it was possible [48]*48for the defendant to produce sufficient evidence of fraud to show that the plaintiff could not recover, and that after the evidence was all in he was satisfied that it was insufficient, and therefore withdrew the issue from the jury. This being the case, we are not able to discover how the plaintiff was prejudiced by the reception of the evidence, even if it was improperly received. Erom the entire record it affirmatively appears that it was error without prejudice.

3. The thirty-third and thirty-fourth assignments allege error in the court’s instructions. The plaintiff quotes certain paragraphs only from the following language used in the charge to the jury; but for the purpose of clearness we include all that was said by the court in this connection :

Now the company had a right to establish and prescribe these rules (to agents), and it was the duty of Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 N.W. 86, 97 Minn. 44, 1906 Minn. LEXIS 645, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kramer-v-northwestern-elevator-co-minn-1906.