Lemke v. Thompson

159 N.W. 844, 35 N.D. 192
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 10, 1910
StatusPublished

This text of 159 N.W. 844 (Lemke v. Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lemke v. Thompson, 159 N.W. 844, 35 N.D. 192 (N.D. 1910).

Opinion

Goss, J.

Action upon an account stated. The account originated with a sale in February, 1909, of merchandise, buildings, and lots to defendant for $5,807.42, under a written contract.

[197]*197The complaint states that in September, 1909, an account stated was agreed upon whereunder defendant was owing plaintiff $826.84; that later offsets arose, and that a second and final account stated was entered into December 30, 1909, for $758.34, the amount sued for with interest.

The answer pleads the original contract in full with many set-offs and payments made thereon, aggregating more than the contract price, and closes with a general denial of plaintiff’s complaint.

Upon trial plaintiff made prima facie proof of alleged account stated, and defendant admitted that an adjustment of mutual accounts was had, and that he gave Lemke a statement in his own figures, as the amount due Lemke upon partial accounting. The statement is:

Principal $695.84
Interest 62.50
$758.34

This is the amount sued for. Plaintiff testified that this balance included all mutual accounts and was in fact an account stated. Defendant, in his testimony, admits this constitutes a stated account upon all matters except one, an item of $750 and interest, on one of the lot contracts, due from the seller to one Olsgaard, to take up which outstanding contract, defendant paid Olsgaard $865 on May 18, 1910, and after the date of the account stated. Under the terms of the contract of sale this $865 was the debt of Lemke, and not of Thompson, the seller having agreed to deliver title by warranty deeds to the lots so paid for in such amount by Thompson. The obligation of plaintiff to pay Olsgaard this amount for these lots stands admitted, as does the fact that defendant paid that amount to Olsgaard after the date of the account stated and for title and in performing Lemke’s contract with Olsgaard.

The only dispute is that Lemke claims a deduction of $750, for this item had been allowed Thompson in arriving at the account stated, leaving Thompson indebted to-plaintiff for the amount of the account stated over and above the $750 item. Defendant claims the contrary. He sets forth in his testimony his side of the controversy as follows: “Lemke came up there and it was in the month of December, 1909, and he said he was about to turn over all he had, turning over the balance that was still supposed to be standing against me, and there was [198]*198some stuff that was short, and he said, We will' fix this all up now; and he says the boys are going to take this matter up with Olsgaard and pay it all up, and he said, You will get title to those lots. I told him of course I would have to have title to those lots, otherwise I wouldn’t be owing them anything.”

Q. Did he say that was all right when you said you would not be owing them anything, or what did he say about that ?
A. Well he understood that, he said.
Q. Did he ask you to give him anything with reference to that balance there ?
A. Well, he says, Put down on this slip about wdiat you think there is balance on the account.
Q. Did he say anything to you what he wanted such a slip for ?
A. Well, he wanted to'show his brothers, he said, that there was still something coming there so that they would have some coming provided they paid the Olsgaard deal.
Q. And was it with that understanding and as a result of thát talk that you placed these figures upon exhibit 2 ? (Statement of principal and interest.)
' A. Yes.
Q. Was 'there anything else said there about the debt that he claimed you owed him at that time ?
A. Nothing more than he said of course the boys was kicking about they didn’t seem to get enough out of it, or something like that.
Q. And did he urge that to you as a further reason for obtaining from you this exhibit 2 ?
A. Yes.

Again he testifies: “Well, regarding that balance he says, of course you will be owing me this provided the boys pay for those Olsgaard lots.”

Q. And were those Olsgaard lots part of the property that was included in this sale agreement, exhibit 1 ?
A. Yes.
Q. Did you afterwards obtain title to the Olsgaard lots ?
A. Yes.
[199]*199Q. In what manner did you get that title ?
A. By paying Olsgaard $865 by check, in May, 1910.

The cheek is in evidence and verifies the payment.

On cross-examination defendant was asked:

Q. I call your attention to exhibit 8 (á lengthy account plaintiff claims contains the detailed accounts of both parties and upon which the account stated was arrived at), to the statement therein, “purchase price of lots in Brocket assumed by Thompson, $750,” — that refers to the Olsgaard lots does it not ?
A. Why that was the figures of the lots, — of the purchase price, rather of the lots.
Q. So that in the figuring of that settlement the Olsgaard lots were figured as a credit to you of $750 ?
A. No.
Q. You knew all the time that there was $750 and interest against those lots did you not ?
A. Yes.

It is then shown that the Olsgaard lots were inventoried among the goods sold with the business to defendant as “two lots on corner $700,” or in other words the lots were sold to defendant at that figure as a part of the consideration, with the sellers to perfect title to them.

Plaintiff’s, witness testifies that he compiled exhibit 3 from figures furnished by Thompson. That “Thompson got the figures and I put them down.” This Thompson denies.

The sole issue of fact, in the case was whether the account stated covered the consideration paid for these Olsgaard lots. Plaintiff says it did. Defendant says it did not, and that he, having subsequently paid it, is entitled to offset it against the account stated. That this was the issue of fact attempted to be presented to the jury is shown by the memorandum decision, on denial of defendant’s motion for a new trial. It reads: “Defendant claims that the amount claimed (in the account stated) would have been correct had it not been for the fact that the defendant afterwards was required to invest somewhat more than that amount in procuring title to some lots, which was the duty of Lemlce to secure, and defendant insists that the amount claimed in the alleged account stated was to be due only in the event that the title [200]*200to these lots was procured for Thompson, The plaintiff and his witnesses claimed that in the alleged account stated the matter of these lots had been taken into consideration, and there was no contingency with reference to such account and the balance due.

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Bluebook (online)
159 N.W. 844, 35 N.D. 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lemke-v-thompson-nd-1910.