Preston v. Otey

14 S.E. 68, 88 Va. 491, 1891 Va. LEXIS 61
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedDecember 3, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 14 S.E. 68 (Preston v. Otey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Preston v. Otey, 14 S.E. 68, 88 Va. 491, 1891 Va. LEXIS 61 (Va. 1891).

Opinion

Richardson, J.,

delivered the opinión of the court.

The object of this action was to recover money paid by said Preston as accommodation endorser for said Otey.

The action was brought to the October rules, 1886; and at the December term, 1886, the defendant pleaded von-assumpsit and payment, upon which plea issue was joined; and, on the defendant’s motion, leave was given him to file a special plea and an account of set-offs in sixty days; and the cause was ’continued. And on the 2d day of February, 1887, the defendant filed the following account of set-offs :

William Ballard Preston,
1884 and 1885. In account with G. C. Otey :
To keeping, pasturing, feeding, and caring for 100' yearling cattle from 1st October, 1884, to 1st ■ January, 1885, . . . . . . $ 300 00
To feeding, keeping, pasturing, and caring for 95 head of cattle from 1st January, 1885, to November 1st, 1885,...... 1,250 00
$1,550 00

This account was endorsed : “ This account is’ filed by G. O. Otey as a set-off to the action now pending against him in the circuit court of Montgomery county, in the name of William Ballard Preston, plaintiff, and will be relied upon by Otey as a set-off at the trial of the cause.

“ G. O. Otey,

By his counsel.”

[493]*493The case was called for trial in the circuit court of Montgomery county on the 11th day of May, 1888, and the trial was then gone into. When the case was called for trial the defendant, Otoy, tiled with his said account of set-offs an additional item for increased weight of cattle — 38,750 pounds at. four cents per pound, making just $1,550. During said term, to-wit, on the 14th day of May, 1888, the jury returned the following verdict: “ We, the jury, find for the plaintiff on his demand, and assess his damages at $785.77, and wo find for the defendant on 1ns plea, of set-off', and assess his damages at. $980.64, and we therefore find for the defendant the excess ascertained by us to be $194.87.” And thereupon the plaintiff' moved the court, to set-aside the verdict of the jury and to grant him a new trial, on the ground that the verdict was contrary to the evidence, which motion the court, overruled, and thereupon proceeded to enter judgment, according to the finding of the jury, to which action of the court the plaintiff excepted; and this is his bill of exceptions No. 1, in which the court certifies all the evidence adduced at the trial, and also the instructions given to the jury at the instance of the parties, respectively.

At a later day of the same term of the court, to-wit, on the 19th day of May, 1888, the plaintiff again moved the court to set aside said verdict and grant- him a new trial on the ground of after-discovered evidence, and, in support of his motion,’ filed his own affidavit and those of Janies T. Evans and George P. Wall.

In his own sworn statement, the plaintiff, Preston, sets forth that he had no knowledge of the evidence detailed by James T. Evans and George P. Wall, set forth in the affidavits of said Evans and Wall, filed with the affidavit of said Preston, until after the verdict was rendered in this suit, and no reason to believe or suspect that such information was in their possession ; and that he believes their statements are true, and that if they had been before the jury they would have found a different verdict.

[494]*494The said affiant, James T. Evans, in his sworn declaration, which accompanies that of the plaintiff, Preston, says : “ That being with G. C. Otey in the fall of 1884, some time after the cattle had been placed upon the farm of said Otey by said William Ballard'Preston, he, Evans, asked said Otey the following question : ‘ Oloyd, you are keeping some cattle for Ballard Preston, ain’t you ? ’ To which question Otey replied : ‘ Ho, they are my cattle; Pm to let him have them back next fall at four cents per pound.’ ” And the affiant, Evans, further states that George P. Wall was present when the above conversation took place.

And in his affidavit George P. Wall declares that he -was in company with James T. Evans, and heard Evans ask said Otey if he was not keeping some cattle for Ballard Preston, and that said Otey replied: “Ho, they are my cattle; Pm to let him have them back next fall at four cents per pound.” And the affiant says this conversation took place some time during the fall of 1884. And it was admitted that the affiant, Evans, was the same James T. Evans, who testified at the trial of the cause; and that the item in defendant’s account of set-offs for increased weight of cattle was not filed by him until the cause was called for hearing at the May term, 1888. But, in the face of this after-discovered evidence, the court overruled the plaintiff’s second motion to set aside the verdict of the jury and grant him a néw trial; and to this action of the court the plaintiff also excepted; and this is his bill of exceptions, Ho. 2. And the plaintiff obtained a writ of error.

There is no dispute as to the claim sued for by the plaintiff, Prestou. The whole controversy is as to the set-off relied upon by the defendant, Otey, at the trial. In the fall of 1884, the said defendant took, without weighing, 100 head of yearling cattle from the plaintiff. The defendant claims that he was to have four cents per pound for the increased weight of the cattle while in his possession. The plaintiff claims that the contract was that the defendant, Otey, was to take the cattle at cost to the plaintiff, which was $30 per head, and that [495]*495the plaintiff, Preston, was to take them hack the next fall at four cents per pound.

The real point in dispute is whether the defendant, Otey, took the cattle as his property, and re-sold them to the plaintiff, Preston, to he re-delivered to the plaintiff the succeeding fall at four cents per pound, or whether he took the cattle as the property of the plaintiff, and was to receive pay for keeping them. In other words, the controlling question is what was the contract between the parties ? This is made perfectly clear by the first of the two instructions given by the court to the jury at the instance of the plaintiff, which is as follows: “ The jury are not to determine the plea of set-off with regard to what it may have been worth to keep cattle by the month ; all such evidence is excluded from them. They are to find on the plea of set-off what was the contract between the parties. If they find that the contract was that Colonel Preston was to pay Mr. Otey four cents a pound for number of pounds that they increased in weight while in Mr. Otey’s possession, they must find how much they increased in weight, and allow the defendant four cents per pound for such increase. But if the jury find that the contract was that Mr. Otey would take the cattle at Avliat they cost Colonel Preston, and that Preston would take them hack in twelve months at four cents per pound, and that the cattle cost Colonel Preston $30 per head, they must find what they were worth at four cents per pound when taken back by Preston, and find for the defendant only the difference between such value and $30 per head.”

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Bluebook (online)
14 S.E. 68, 88 Va. 491, 1891 Va. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/preston-v-otey-va-1891.