Lancaster Tire & Rubber Co. v. McGraw
This text of 195 P. 815 (Lancaster Tire & Rubber Co. v. McGraw) 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.
Opinion
“That plaintiff claims in its complaint filed herein to have sold certain automobile tires and an inner tube to the defendant during the months of August and September, 1918, for the agreed price of Three Hundred Fifty-seven and 98/100 ($357.98) Dollars, and this court finds that no such sale took place and that the. automobile tires and one inner tube claimed to have been sold to the defendant were not purchased by the defendant nor was any part thereof purchased by. the defendant herein.”
The testimony offered by the plaintiff is to the effect that plaintiff’s salesman solicited the defendant to purchase automobile tires from plaintiff, explaining to the prospective purchaser that, while plaintiff did not sell direct to individuals, but to corporations, or large business concerns, they would sell the tires to him, and bill them to the corporation of which defendant was an officer, thereby enabling him to secure the liberal discounts which were granted such larger concerns; that with that understanding, defendant purchased four tires for an automobile belonging to the foreman of the Centralia Mining Company of which defendant was president, and four tires for an automobile belonging to the defendant personally, all of which were billed [409]*409to the Centralia Coal Mining Company, with the distinct understanding between the defendant and plaintiff’s salesman, that defendant was the actual purchaser, and that the billing of the merchandise to the corporation was for the sole purpose of enabling the defendant to secure the discounts which the business rules of the plaintiff corporation would not allow to an individual. The evidence on behalf of the defendant is to the effect that, while the automobiles were the private property of the individuals who used them, they were used constantly in the service of the Centralia Coal Mining Company, which was to pay for the upkeep thereof; that when defendant ordered the merchandise in question, he did so expressly for the Centralia Coal Mining Company and not otherwise, and that there was never any agreement or understanding such as was testified to by witnesses for the plaintiff. It. will thus be observed that there is a direct conflict in the testimony as to who was, in fact, the purchaser of the merchandise described in the complaint. The plaintiff asserts that it was sold to and purchased by the defendant, who, in turn, declares that it was purchased by and sold to the Centralia Coal Mining Company. The complaint alleges that it was sold to the defendant, which is denied by the answer. The finding of the fact made by the trial court is to the effect that the sale was not made to the defendant, and that the defendant had not purchased the same or any part thereof. If this is not a finding of an ultimate fact in the case, then it is equally true that the pleadings raise no issue of fact pertaining to a sale.
Tested by the rule clearly announced and fully discussed in Oregon Home Builders v. Montgomery Inv. Co., 94 Or. 349 (184 Pac. 487), the finding made by the court is one of fact and not a conclusion of law, [410]*410except as the latter may possibly be involved in the question of fact.
“Generally, a special verdict must pass upon all the material issues; and yet a special verdict will be adequate if it states sufficient findings on an issue which ultimately determines the case and necessarily supports the judgment rendered so that other issues in the controversy become immaterial.”
So, in the present case, if the defendant has purchased no merchandise from the plaintiff, the value of the merchandise and the sums paid on account of a sale to someone else are immaterial, and cannot in any way affect the judgment.
Finding no error in the record, the judgment is affirmed. Affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
195 P. 815, 99 Or. 406, 1921 Ore. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lancaster-tire-rubber-co-v-mcgraw-or-1921.