Osgood v. Bauder

47 N.W. 1001, 82 Iowa 171
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 5, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 47 N.W. 1001 (Osgood v. Bauder) 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
Osgood v. Bauder, 47 N.W. 1001, 82 Iowa 171 (iowa 1891).

Opinion

Givek, J.

I. Out of a voluminous abstract, with 'three amendments and one hundred and ninety-two [174]*174assignments of error, we gather as the first and most important question presented, that of the validity of the contract upon . 1. CONTRACTS for options: Illinois statute: validity. which the defendants base their counterclaim. This question was raised by the defendants’ motion to strike from and upon demurrer to the reply, by objection to the introduction of the Illinois statute in evidence, and to other testimony, by requests to charge, and by exceptions to the order sustaining the plaintiff’s motion, that the defendants be nonsuited on their counterclaim. The determination of this single question disposes of most of the numerous assignments of error. On the former appeal,. 75 Iowa, 550, it was held that the contract as set out in the defendants’ answer was separable, and that the part giving an option to the defendants to order two hundred and fifty cars more of coal, on the same terms, was void, under the statute of Illinois. After the case was remanded, the defendants filed an amended and substituted answer and several amendments thereto, wherein the alleged agreement is very minutely and in some respects differently stated than in the former answer and amendments. The plaintiff’s motion for nonsuit was upon the ground that there was no evidence to sustain the counterclaim; that the contracts were separable, and that the contract as to the two hundred and fifty cars was within the statute of frauds and void, and because the answer shows it void. The only persons having personal knowledge of what the contract was are the defendant, George G. Bauder, and S. G. Russell, agent of the Whitebreast Coal Company, by whom it was made. The testimony of these gentlemen, and the documentary evidence, shows that the agreement made was in every respect substantially as alleged in the answer presented on the former appeal, and not as set out in those since filed. The testimony shows an agreement clearly within the rule of the former opinion. The appellant contends that the motion for nonsuit was sustained, upon the ground that the agreement, as pleaded, was void and not upon the basis of the evidence. The language of [175]*175the motion and the state oi the evidence is clearly against such conclusion. That the court overruled that part oi the plaintiff’s motion which ashed to strike certain evidence relating to the option contract, does not show that the nonsuit was ordered on the pleadings, ior that testimony had a bearing upon the issues as to the one hundred and fifty cars. The appellants argue at length, and cite numerous authorities to show, that the agreement, as alleged in their last substituted answer and amendments, is not within the Illinois statute. Finding that the testimony shows the agreement made to be such as is provided ágainst by that statute, we do not inquire whether the answer shows such an agreement or not.

II. The appellants contend that there was testimony tending to show an agreement, as alleged in their b. pkactioe: ¡5suef^mins 3ury-answer, and that the court erred in not submitting the issues as to the counter-claim to the jury. Many oi the numerous decisions oi this court on that subject are cited, in most of which it will be found that this court has sustained the lower court in sustaining and in overruling motions for nonsuit. A careful examination of the testimony satisfies ns that, there is no substantial conflict as to what the agreement was, in any of the respects affecting its validity. The testimony of Mr. Bauder and Mr. Russell, and the documentary evidence, are in substantial harmony on these points. In Powers v. Council Bluffs, 45 Iowa, 652, it is held that the parties have a right to submit their case to the jury upon whatever evidence they offer, be it ever so inconsiderable, “but not so if a party offers no evidence, or all the proof on both sides points in the same direction.” We think all the proofs in his case, on that branch of it, point to an illegal contract. In Starry v. Railroad, 51 Iowa, 419, the court, finding it to be a case wherein it would have been the duty of the court to set aside the verdict in favor of the plaintiffs, said: “Why then occupy the valuable time of the court at the public expense, for the purpcse of going through a useless form and [176]*176ceremony ? ’ We think that, under the testimony in this case, it would have been the duty of the court to set aside a finding for the defendants on the counterclaim. Our conclusion is that the agreement, as proven, was within the rule of the former opinion of this court, and that there was no error in the rulings of the district court, mentioned in the first paragraph.

III. Mr. Bauder was asked what he did under the arrangement as to placing or selling coal, to which 2. EvidrNob: il-louai fimiract: damages* plaintiff’s obiection was sustained. In this A f> connection defendant stated certain matter which they offered to prove, and the court held that they should do so by putting questions. The practice of making statements in the presence of the jury of what is offered to be proven is so frequently resorted to for unwarrantable purposes that the better practice is to require the questions to be raised by interrogatories to the witness, when they can be so raised. The record was as completely made for the defendants by the interrogatories put as by their statement, and there was no error in the court’s requiring them to make the record by putting questions to the witness. There was no error in refusing to allow defendants to prove what they had done as to placing or selling coal. In the view we take of the contract as to the two hundred and fifty cars, it was certainly immaterial what defendants had done toward placing that coal. The allegation in the answer is that defendants had purchased four hundred carloads of coal, one hundred and fifty of which “should be shipped absolutely, as ordered ; , * * * that said defendants were to take, a,nd said Whitebreast Coal Company to deliver, upon the same terms and conditions, all the coal that said defendants' could place and sell among their customers, and to their trade, not to exceed two hundred and fifty carloads additional.” The only questions remaining were as to the one hundred and fifty carloads, and it will be noticed that these were to be delivered absolutely, and what is said as to placing and selling is as to the two hundrea and fifty cars, and they being [177]*177out of tlie case there was no error in the ruling of the court.-

IY. Twenty-five assignments of error, based upon the sustaining of plaintiff’s objections to acts and declarations 4__. deo]ara. tions of agent., of one Pitman, general agent for the coal company, are submitted together. We are not referred to the pages of abstract showing these objections, and have found it quite difficult to trace them. We understand that it is not claimed that Pitman had anything to do with the making of the contract. The acts and declarations sought to be proven occurred after the contract was fully made. McPherrin v. Jennings, 66 Iowa, 622, is relied upon, wherein it is said: “The ground upon which the declarations or admissions of an agent are admitted in evidence against the principal is that whatever he does or says in reference to the business in which he is at the time employed, and which is within the scope of his authority, is done or said by the principal.” We do not discover that what was said and done by Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
47 N.W. 1001, 82 Iowa 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/osgood-v-bauder-iowa-1891.