Lyon v. Hayden

58 Vt. 662
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMay 15, 1886
StatusPublished

This text of 58 Vt. 662 (Lyon v. Hayden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lyon v. Hayden, 58 Vt. 662 (Vt. 1886).

Opinion

The opinion of the. court was delivered by

Walker, J.

The issue before the jury in the trial of this-cause in the County Court, was whether the defendant purchased the hay tedder in question or not. The tedder was stored on the defendant’s premises at the time of the commencement of the suit and' trial. The plaintiff’s claim was that, under an agreement made between them, the use of the tedder by the defendant for more than one half day was an acceptance of it by him and completed the sale to him. The defendant admitted-taking the machine for trial and using it upon three or four occasions on differént parts of his farm and until it_ broke; but denied making any such agreement with the plaintiff, and claimed that his possession of the machine, after he had tried it and decided not to keep it, was under the request of Renfrew, the plaintiff’s agent, to house it until the plaintiff should take it away.

The only error claimed by the plaintiff is the admission of the testimony of the defendant and the witness Renfrew, as to the directions which Renfrew, while acting as agent for the plaintiff, gave to the defendant, after he had tried the tedder, in respect to putting it under cover and keeping it housed until the plaintiff should come around and see to it. The objection to this testimony was placed upon the ground that no authority from the plaintiff to Renfrew to give such directions had been shown.

The defendant received the tedder from the plaintiff for [664]*664trial through his agent, Renfrew; and the case shows that the plaintiff, on cross-examination, testified in substance that he told Renfrew, when he left the tedder with him for . the purposes detailed in the bill of exceptions, that if he had a place where he could put it under cover, when not in use, he should like to have it housed as he did not like to have it stand out exposed to the weather. This instruction to Renfrew was sufficient authority to him to make the arrangement which the testimony, objected to by the plaintiff, tended to show that he made with the defendant to keep the machine under cover and housed until the plaintiff should oome and take care of it. So the ground of the plaintiff’s objection to this testimony entirely fails.

• The testimony thus received under the plaintiff’s objection tended to disprove the plaintiff’s theory and had a direct bearing upon the issue on trial. It tended to show the character of the defendant’s possession of the tedder and to rebut any inference from his possession that he had accepted it and was holding it as a purchaser and owner, and was therefore properly admitted by the court.

Judgment affirmed.

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Bluebook (online)
58 Vt. 662, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lyon-v-hayden-vt-1886.