Mighell v. Dougherty

17 L.R.A. 755, 86 Iowa 480
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 20, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 17 L.R.A. 755 (Mighell v. Dougherty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mighell v. Dougherty, 17 L.R.A. 755, 86 Iowa 480 (iowa 1892).

Opinion

Kinne, J.

The plaintiff claims that on July 20, 1890, he orally contracted with the defendant to deliver to him (the plaintiff), at his elevator in Lake City, Iowa, one thousand, five hundred bushels of oats, of the crop of 1890, then raised and unthreshed, at the agreed price of eighteen cents per bushel; that the defendant has refused to perform his contract; that he has sustained damages in the sum of three hundred and fifty dollars. To this petition a demurrer was sustained, on the ground that the alleged contract was within the statute of frauds. Afterwards the petition was amended by alleging that the grain thus contracted to be sold in 1890 was raised that year by the defendant, and was on July 20, 1890, unthreshed; that said oats were to be delivered in a merchantable condition; [483]*483and, that, in order to thresh- and put them in merchantable condition, it was necessary to expend work and labor, skill and money, on said oats; that the plaintiff relies on the evidence of the defendant to establish said contract. In a second count it is averred that on July 20, 1890, the defendant contracted with the plaintiff to deliver to him, at his elevator in Lake City one thousand, five hundred bushels of oats, then growing or grown in Calhoun county, Iowa, and then the property of the defendant, at the agreed price of eighteen cents per bushel; that they were to be delivered to the plaintiff in merchantable condition, and that money had to be expended, and work and labor expended, thereon, in order to place said oats in such ■condition, and deliver them to the plaintiff, on or before September 30, 1890; that the defendant had refused and neglected to deliver any part of said oats; that the market price of oats in Lake City at the time agreed 'upon for delivery was forty cents per bushel. Judgment was asked for three hundred and fifty dollars.

The defendant, in substance, denies the allegations in the first count of the plaintiff’s petition, and as to the second count he says the pretended contract is within the statute of frauds, because the contract was not in writing, no part of the purchase price paid, and no part of the grain delivered. That said grain was owned and possessed by the defendant at the time of the pretended contract. The case was tried to a jury, who returned a verdict for the plaintiff foT one hundred and ninety-five dollars, on which judgment was entered.

1. evidence: erinstructiona^o ■iury’ I. Our statute reads that, except when otherwise provided, no evidence of a contract in relation to the sale of personal property, when no part of the property is delivered, and no part of the price is paid, is competent, unless it be in writing and signed by the party charged, or by his lawfully authorized agent. Code, sections 3663, [484]*4843664. It is also provided that the provisions quoted shall not “prevent the party himself against whom the unwritten contract is sought to be enforced from being' called as a witness by the opposite party, nor his oral testimony from being evidence.” Id., section 3667.. We have held that, while our statute provides that no evidence of any such contract is competent, and the language of the English statute is, “no action shall be brought,” the effect is the same in both cakes. Westheimer v. Peacock, 2 Iowa, 531. The defendant was-put on the stand as a witness for the plaintiff under the statute, and the appellant complains that the court also-permitted the plaintiff to introduce other witnesses to establish the contract. It is the settled rule in this state that, where the adverse party is called as a witness under such circumstances, the plaintiff must establish the contract by his testimony alone, and the evidence of other witnesses cannot be received to contradict or explain it, or supply omissions in it. Auter v. Miller, 18 Iowa, 411. Nor can he introduce other evidence to contradict or impeach that of the defendant. Hunt v. Coe, 15 Iowa, 198; Thorn v. Moore, 21 Iowa, 285. Hence, if this was a case within the statute, the admission of testimony, other than that of the defendant, to establish the contract, was error. The error, if any, .however, was cured by the third instruction of the court, in which the jury are told to give the cause of action set out in the plaintiff’s first count no consideration, as the defendant’s evidence was not sufficient to establish the contract therein set out. Kinne, Pleading and Practice, section 535, and cases cited.

2. statute of menttosfii66' growmg gram. II. This case squarely raises the question as to whether a sale of growing grain to be delivered in marketable condition, — harvested and threshed, — when no part thereof is delivere(^ anq n0ne of the purchase price is paid, can be.taken out of the operation of our statute [485]*485of frauds by virtue of the exception that the provisions of the statute shall not apply “when the article of personal property sold'is not, at the time of the contract, owned by the vendor, and ready for delivery, but labor, skill, or money are necessarily to be expended in producing or procuring the same.” Code, section 3665. It may be conceded that there are authorities holding that a sale of such property, under such circumstances, is not within the statute of frauds, but we think such is not the correct rule. The authorities in our own state throw very little light on this question. It was held in Partridge v. Wilsey 8 Iowa, 459, that, in case •of a sale of personal property, the fact that the goods were to be shipped from New York city to Keokuk at an expense did not take it out from the operation of the statute. In Bennett v. Nye, 4 G. Greene, 410, the facts stated are so meager as to make it-of little force as a precedent. It does not appear in that case whether the hogs sold were owned by the defendant, or even in existence, at the time of making the contract. The word “producing,” under the statute, means “giving being or’form to,” “manufacturing,” “making;” and ‘ procuring ” means “bringing into possession,” ■“obtaining.” Webster’s Dictionary. Hence the labor, skill, or money necessarily expended for “producing or procuring” the article must be in giving it being or form, manufacturing or making it, or in bringing the ■article into possession, as by purchasing it, and the like.

Clearly, it seems to us, it cannot be said, within the scope of these definitions and the meaning-of the words as used in the statute, that the defendant, by harvesting, threshing, and hauling to market his oats, is bestowing labor, skill and money in either “producing or procuring” the oats. He expended no labor, skill or money by virtue of the contract that he- would not have done if the contract had never existed. The [486]*486grain existed at the time of the making of the contract, in the identical form in which it would finally be sold. True, it must be harvested and separated from the-straw and chaff. So the grain was not produced by the defendant at all, nor did he procure it. He had the oats, but, to put them in proper shape for market, he must cut, thresh and haul them. All this he would have done at his own instance, even if he had never' heard of the plaintiff. This labor, skill and money, then, was not expended specially at the instance of the-plaintiff.

The acts relied upon to take this case out from-under the provision of the statute, and bring it within the exception heretofore quoted, are acts only which naturally and necessarily were a part of the plaintiff’s business and avocation. His care of these oats was.

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Bluebook (online)
17 L.R.A. 755, 86 Iowa 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mighell-v-dougherty-iowa-1892.