Northwest Thresher Co. v. McNinch

140 P. 1170, 42 Okla. 155, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 316
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 12, 1914
Docket3446
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 140 P. 1170 (Northwest Thresher Co. v. McNinch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northwest Thresher Co. v. McNinch, 140 P. 1170, 42 Okla. 155, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 316 (Okla. 1914).

Opinion

Opinion by

RITTENHOUSE, C.

There are numerous assignments of error presented by plaintiff, but it will only be necessary for us to consider two of the questions raised. (1) Did the court abuse its discretion in allowing defendant to amend its answer by alleging mutual mistake of law, after the evidence was submitted and the opening .argument of defendant closed? (2) Did the evidence offered by the deféndant prove the allegations of mutual mistake of law? The answer of defendant was amended four times before trial, three times during trial, and once during the argument.

The trial court abused its discretion in allowing the defendant to amend his answer to allege mutual mistake of law, after the evidence had been closed on both sides, witnesses excused, the jury instructed, and counsel for defendant having made his opening argument to the jury; such amendment being over the objection of the plaintiff, and without giving the plaintiff an op *158 portunity to defend as against the defense of mutual mistake of law. Under section 5679, Comp. Laws 1909, the court is vested with considerable discretion in allowing amendments, where such amendments do not change substantially the claim or defense. Gross Construction Co. v. Hale, 37 Okla. 131, 129 Pac. 28. The plaintiff objected to the amendment on the ground that the same was a surprise, and that it was not prepared to meet the issue raised by the amendment, the witnesses having been excused and not in attendance on the court; it was therefore an abuse of discretion to allow the amendment alleging mutual mistake of law, without granting to the plaintiff an opportunity to meet such issue.

The order allowing defendant to amend by alleging mutual mistake of law was improper for another reason: at the time the evidence., relied on as establishing the defense of mutual mistake of law, was offered, plaintiff objected to such evidence upon the ground that the same was immaterial and incompetent to any issue in the case; the court, therefore, erred in permitting the ■amendment to conform to the facts proven when such facts were admitted over the objection of the plaintiff, and were not within the issue.

“A motion, after the dose of the evidence, to conform the pleadings to the proof, can never be granted where the''admission of the evidence was properly objected to when it was offered, upon the ground that it did not tend to support the allegations of the pleadings.”

1 Ency. Pl. & Pr. 585; Walker v. O’Connell, 59 Kan. 306, 52 Pac. 894; Worthington v. La Violette, 60 Wash. 525, 111 Pac. 784; Mendenhall v. Harrisburgh Water Co., 27 Ore. 38, 39 Pac. 399; Heywood Bros. & Wakefield Co. v. Doernbecher Mfg. Co., 48 Ore. 359, 86 Pac. 357, 87 Pac. 530; St. Louis, I. M. & S. R. Co. v. Holmes, 88 Ark. 181, 114 S. W. 221; Buxton v. Sargent, 7 N. D. 503, 75 N. W. 811.

The next question involved in.this action is whether the evidence offered by the defendant proves the allegation of mutual mistake of law. In our opinion, there is no subject-matter in this case on which a mutual mistake of law could be based. The *159 defense of mutual mistake of law should only be allowed in extreme cases, and then only when the mistake of law is of a material nature and was the determining ground of the transaction. It will be seen from an examination of the evidence that the facts proven are not sufficient to bring the defense within the class of mutual mistake of law from which relief can be had. The testimony of McNinch on the issue of mistake of law was, in substance, as follows: That he was a farmer; that he was not acquainted and familiar with the laws of the territory of Oklahoma and their technical application; that he knew nothing about them; that he did not know and apprehend that by making the writing of May 12, 1905, the law would prevent him from proving an oral agreement outside to do the threshing; that he understood and apprehended the law to be that he could make that oral agreement outside, and that it would be good, notwithstanding it was not in writing; that he did not learn the law to be the contrary until “now”; that this agent whose name was Gill said that if anything happened to the wheat, if it was a failure or the threshing was not done, the notes would be void and could not be collected by law; that was his comprehension of the law and belief of the law at that time; that the oral promise referred to didn’t need to be included in the contract “ * * * the statement that he made to me; * * * he said that in case the threshing was not done the notes would be void; he said the threshing would be done; that they would make McClung thresh it, and if he didn’t thresh it, he (Gill) would thresh it; I would not have signed the contract had I known the law to be as I now find it to be when I come into court, to wit, that everything oral must be put in the contract or it would not be any good; he (Gill) told me in case anything happened to the wheat, that the notes could not be collected by law, for the reason that they could not get something for nothing; I have run a meat market for three or four years; I can read and write; in the transaction of my business I execute many checks, and have signed a good many notes in my business, in one way and another; that a written contract was better evidence of what the transaction really was; well, I suppose it would be where. * * * I alsf *160 supposed throughout my business that any executed note for which a man received nothing was uncollectible in law."

The testimony of the agent, Gill, on cross-examination as to-the issue of mistake of law was,'in substance, as follows:

“Q. Did not you, yourself, have the belief at that time that if he did not get the threshing done the debt could not be collected off him? A. I don’t know. I wasn’t a lawyer. Q. That was your idea of the law ? A. I cannot say it was. Q. Can you say it was not? A. In fact it was the first collateral note contract I had ever had anything to do .with. Q. Are you sure you did not say as an inducement to get him to sign it, ‘Now, if you sign this contract and you don’t get your threshing done, that the contract nor the note cannot be collected in law, because you would not get anything for it?’ A. There was no note at that time. I don’t remember making any such statement. Q. And you don’t remember that you didn’t? A. I would not swear that I didn’t.”

There is no. showing in this testimony that Gill was mistaken as to the law; the mere expression of an opinion as to the law is not sufficient to show what Gill understood or apprehended the law to be. The parties dealt with each other on equal terms ; there was no mistake in the eexcution of the note they intended to execute; no request was made to have the private oral promise of Gill put in the note, nor was there an attempt to do so; the parties did just what they intended to do, that is, that the plaintiff should sell to McClung a threshing machine, and McClung was to secure the indebtedness by farmers’ notes, one of which was to be executed by McNinch for $150; the machine was delivered to and accepted by McClung, and the plaintiff, under the evidence in this case, could not be restored substantially to its rights as they existed previous to the sale. Crosier v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
140 P. 1170, 42 Okla. 155, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northwest-thresher-co-v-mcninch-okla-1914.