McNeely v. Duff

50 Kan. 488
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 50 Kan. 488 (McNeely v. Duff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McNeely v. Duff, 50 Kan. 488 (kan 1893).

Opinion

Opinion by

Strang, C.:

Action was brought in this case upon two distinct written agreements, as follows:

“682. St. Joseph, Mo., April 25, 1887.
“ I agree to pay Messrs. Duff & Ellson $682 out of William Plank’s board bill for April, 1887, provided the board bill amounts to $1,400, and the C. K. & N. Railway Company pays it to me. J. D. McNeely.”
[490]*490“St. Joseph, Mo., May 12, 1887.
“Messrs. Duff & Ellson: You will please let F. Plank have what meat he may want to run the boarding house in Horton, from the first of May to further orders, and I will pay you for the same. J. D. McNeely.”

These transactions were had during the period when the Rock Island railway was building in Kansas. J. D. Mc-Neely was a wholesale grocery man in St. Joseph, Mo.; Duff & Ellson were conducting a retail meat business in Horton, this state, and William Plank and wife were running a boarding house at Horton, and boarding the construction force of the C. K. & N. railway. McNeely was furnishing groceries and provisions to Plank and wife for the board of the railway laborers, and was, under an agreement between Plank, the company, and himself, to receive his pay directly from the company. Duff & Ellson were also letting Plank and wife have meat, lard and ice for use in said boarding house, and on the 25th day of April, 1887, Plank and Duff, representing the firm of Duff & Ellson, went to St. Joseph, and after an interview with McNeely, in which they informed him that Plank’s board bills for April, to be paid by the company, would amount to $1,500, he gave Duff, for the firm which he represented, the writing sued on in the first cause of action. Afterward, on June 7, McNeely paid $400, which was indorsed on said written instrument. The first cause of action, which was on said'instrument, was for the balance due thereon. Duff & Ellson claimed to have sold Plank, or his wife, F. Plank, on the order of McNeely, $318.85 worth of meats, including some ice and lard, and they also claimed they had sold William Plank before that time $63.25 worth of meat. Duff & Ellson had in the meantime purchased $191 worth of bacon of McNeely, for which they gave him credit, after deducting the bill of Plank for $63.25, and claimed a balance due on the second cause of action of $190.70, and interest. The defendant answered, claiming that he was only to pay Duff & Ellson the amount set out in plaintiff’s first cause of [491]*491action on condition that the C. K. & N. Railway Company paid him $1,400 on Plank’s board bills for April, 1887, and then alleged that he only received $982 from the company; that he had paid the $400 indorsed on said writing while both he and Duff, representing Duff & Ellson, believed the bills of Plank for April would amount to $1,400; and that, therefore, said sum had been paid and received through a mutual mistake, and on an agreement that they (Duff & Ell-son) would pay him back the $400, with interest at 10 per cent., if he (McNeely) did not receive from the company $1,400 on Plank’s bills for the month of April, and he therefore demanded judgment against the plaintiff for the $400 aud interest. He also claimed to have sold to the plaintiffs bacon to the amount of $191.40, for which he also claimed judgment. The case was tried by a jury, and the following findings were made:

“1. At the time the defendant, J. D. McNeely, paid the $400 on said written instrument, did he (J. D. McNeely) believe that there was due said William Plank, for boarding the C. K. & N. Co.’s men for the month of April, 1887, the sum of $1,400? A. No.
“ 2. At or before the time the defendant paid the $400 on said written instrument, did Duff & Ellson promise to pay the same back to said J. D. McNeely, if there was not $1,400 due William Plank from said railway company for boarding its men for the month of April, 1887? A. No.
“3. Was said $400 paid on said written instrument under the mutual belief of plaintiffs and defendant that there was $1,400 or more due said William Plank from said railway company for boarding its men for the month of April, 1887? A. No.
“4. How much do you find that Duff & Ellson owed J. D. McNeely for bacon, etc., furnished them by said J. D. McNeely? A. ($128.15) one hundred and twenty-eight dollars and fifteen cents.
“5. How much meat did plaintiffs furnish F. Plank on said order, from May 12, 1887, to the time said account closed? A. ($161) one hundred and sixty-one dollars.
“6. How much was due William Plank from said C. K. [492]*492& N. Rly. Co. tor boarding its men for the month of April, 1887? A. $998.
“7. How much did defendant, J. D. McNeely, collect from said C. K. & N. Rly. Co. for board due William Plauk for the month of April, 1887? A. ($992) nine hundred and ninety-two dollars.”

.The jury also returned into court a general verdict for the plaintiffs in the sum of $36.72. A motion for a new trial was argued and overruled, and the case is brought to this court by the defendant below for review. It is alleged that the court below erred in receiving and also in rejecting testimony.

With our view of this case, the first cause of action is entirely eliminated from it. The findings of the jury negative all the claims of the defendant with respect to this cause of action, and the admission of the parties, the findings of the jury, that McNeely only received from the railway company the sum of $982 on the board bills of Plank for the month of April, 1887, aud the instruction of the court in this matter negatived the right of the plaintiff to recover anything on this cause of action. So far as the second cause of action is concerned, there are two questions which challenge the attention of the court: First, did the trial court err in admitting, over the objection of the defendant therein, the evidence of the witnesses who testified concerning the amount of meat sold by Duff & Ellson to F. Plank, on the order which is made the basis of said second cause of action ? The plaintiff in error contends that as the witnesses could' not testify as to the amount or value of the meat sold, when first on the stand, they should not have been permitted to testify after having refreshed their recollections by referring to the book of accounts which had been rejected as evidence when.it was offered in proof of the account. We do not think this contention is valid. As we understand the rule, the witness may refresh his recollection by any book or memoranda containing the account, or so much of it as is sufficient to refresh his recollection, whether it is in such form that it would be. [493]*493received in evidence or not, and then testify, if he has any independent recollection of the transaction. The witnesses whose evidence is complained of seemed to know but little about the transaction even after they had refreshed their recollections, but they did claim to have some independent recollection of the value of the meat sold.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 Kan. 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcneely-v-duff-kan-1893.