Parsons v. Rice

264 P. 396, 81 Mont. 509, 1928 Mont. LEXIS 144
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 14, 1928
DocketNo. 6,221.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 264 P. 396 (Parsons v. Rice) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parsons v. Rice, 264 P. 396, 81 Mont. 509, 1928 Mont. LEXIS 144 (Mo. 1928).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS

delivered the opinion of the court.

John A. Rice, sheriff of Missoula county, has appealed from an order granting Harry H. Parsons a new trial in- an action wherein the latter sued for damages for the alleged *513 conversion of a Hudson coach, on the trial of which action verdict was rendered for defendant.

The chronological history of the Harry Parsons coach is as follows: In the year 1926 A. W. Stephenson and W. E. Edwards, Missoula agents for the Hudson and Essex automobiles, were doing business under the firm name of Edwards Motor Company and, apparently, “on a shoestring.” On April 2 Stephenson, who was the business manager of the company, sold the coach to one Alfred M. West on conditional sales contract which recited a down payment of practically one-half the price and an agreement to pay the balance, or |725, in monthly installments of $51.79, payable on the second day of each month thereafter until fully paid, title to remain in the company until the full amount was paid. By an independent contract, West agreed to leave the coach, which was the only one the company then had, in the salesroom every day, except Sundays, so that Stephenson could exhibit and demonstrate it in an attempt to sell like cars to customers.

Immediately after making the sale, the motor company assigned the contract to the Western Bond & Mortgage Company, of Portland, Oregon, in consideration of the sum of $650 to it paid, and unconditionally guaranteed the payment of the full amount due under the contract. The contract, with the assignment attached thereto, was filed by the Western Bond & Mortgage Company in the office of the clerk of Missoula county on April 5. West had knowledge of the assignment and made the payments due May 2 and June 2 to the assignee.

On June 14, Stephenson induced Parsons to go to the salesroom and there exhibited the coach to him, telling him that it was a demonstrator car which had been run about 1,400 miles, and offered it to him for $1,250. Parsons accepted the offer, paid the full amount by check and took possession of the coach.

Some time during the month of June, West made arrangements with Stephenson to turn the coach in on the purchase of a like car to be delivered at Detroit, Michigan, on his arrival at that city, provided the assignee was satisfied, and on June 23 *514 signed an order for a new car. 'Stephenson notified the assignee of the arrangement made and that the new contract, when executed, would be substituted for the one here under consideration, but it does not appear that the mortgage company received the notice.

West failed to make the payment due July 2, and thereupon the mortgage company placed the contract and assignment, or copies thereof, in the hands of the sheriff, who seized the coach and thereafter sold it at public auction, West becoming the purchaser at the exact amount due under the contract plus the cost of sale.

On July 7 Parsons commenced action against Edwards and Stephenson for the amount paid, basing his action upon fraudulent misrepresentations, and on July 8 commenced action against the sheriff for damages for conversion of the coach.

Edwards and Stephenson, being then out of business and apparently judgment proof, defaulted, and, before the action against the sheriff came on for trial, a default judgment was entered against them.

The trial of the action against the sheriff resulted in a verdict for the defendant, and thereupon plaintiff moved for a new trial upon all of the grounds mentioned in the statute, and, in his notice, stated that the motion would be made upon affidavits attached and upon the minutes of the court. The affidavits filed recite that the jury found against the plaintiff upon the theory that he had not paid the purchase price, as he could not produce the canceled cheek while on the stand, that a bank cashier had been found who would testify on a new trial that the cheek was cashed by the motor company," and that an attorney of Missoula would likewise testify that West had told him, prior to the time the sale was made to Parsons, that he (West) was going to purchase a new car and take delivery in Detroit and had instructed Stephenson to sell the coach. These affidavits show that the facts therein stated were not known to plaintiff at the time of trial and could not have been discovered by the exercise of reasonable diligence.

*515 Defendant opposed the motion by written “response,” in which he denied the existence of each of the grounds of motion, other than that of newly discovered evidence, and, as to the latter ground, alleged that the matters contained in the affidavits filed in support of the motion were merely cumulative and therefore did not entitle plaintiff to a new trial. With this “response” defendant filed an affidavit in which West denied that he ever had the conversation attributed to him.

The motion was submitted to the court without oral argument, on the record made and briefs filed. It was granted by a general order sufficient to cover all grounds stated in the notice of motion, made April 30, 1927. Thereafter additional time was granted in which to prepare, serve and file a bill of exceptions, which was settled and filed on October 1, 1927, and which is in all respects such a bill as is settled on appeal from a judgment.

Counsel for defendant preface their specifications of error with the statement that, “in view of the provisions of section 9750, Revised Codes 1921, which provides, among other things, that upon an appeal of this nature the court may review the decision and any intermediate order or decision excepted to,” and that the trial court proceeded upon an erroneous conception of the law in the trial of the case, which error undoubtedly influenced the decision on the motion, it becomes necessary to assign error upon all adverse rulings made during the trial materially affecting the merits of the controversy. They then predicated error upon sixteen alleged erroneous rulings and upon the decision upon the motion.

1. Counsel misconceive the purpose of the provisions of section 9750 above; it is expressly made applicable only to “an appeal from a judgment,” and therefore has no application to an appeal from an order granting a new trial.

2. The specifications of error fall more nearly within the doctrine of “compensatory error” based upon the final provisions of section 9751, Revised Codes of 1921, in that they *516 urge, in effect, that, had the court not committed error against the defendant during the trial, the proceedings had on the trial would present a ease in which a new trial should not have been granted, as a trial court should never grant a new trial when it is apparent that the result reached on the trial would not be changed on a retrial. (Leyson v. Davis, 17 Mont. 220, 31 L. R. A. 429, 42 Pac. 775; In re Colbert’s Estate, 31 Mont. 461, 107 Am. St. Rep. 439, 3 Ann. Cas. 952, 78 Pac. 971, 80 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
264 P. 396, 81 Mont. 509, 1928 Mont. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parsons-v-rice-mont-1928.