Russell v. Olson

133 N.W. 1030, 22 N.D. 410, 1911 N.D. LEXIS 60
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJune 22, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 133 N.W. 1030 (Russell v. Olson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Russell v. Olson, 133 N.W. 1030, 22 N.D. 410, 1911 N.D. LEXIS 60 (N.D. 1911).

Opinion

Pollock, • Special Judge.

Tbe defendant rented to plaintiff a certain hotel in tbe city of Minot., One of tbe clauses in tbe contract reads as follows: “Tbe party of tbe first part (Olson) agrees, during tbe continuance of tbis lease, to furnish tbe beat for tbe proper beating of the-same, from tbe 1st day of October to tbe succeeding 1st day of May during each year, from tbe date hereof.” Tbe action is for damages for violation of tbis condition of tbe lease. Plaintiff alleges that under the lease be entered upon said premises October 1, 1905, and remained there until October 30, 1906, when be was evicted by reason of tbe failure of tbe defendant to furnish beat for said premises. Tbe written lease made by tbe parties was for and during tbe terms of five years from October 1, 1905. Tbe damages claimed were: First, for $100 per month from October 1, 1905, to May 1, 1906, $700 in all; second, $1,-000 per year from October 30, 1906, for tbe remaining four years’ term of tbe lease, total $1,000; third, because be bad bought certain furniture especially fitted for the building, and paid therefor $2,000, and which, when moved from tbe said building, bad no value in excess of $500, and on that cause of action claims $1,000 damages. Defendant entered ai general denial, except that be admitted making tbe lease as alleged by plaintiff, and then set forth a counterclaim for damages: First, for [putting in partitions and injuring tbe floors, $100; second, abandoning, |the place without cause, damage $1,800, being tbe rental of said premises for tbe unexpired term; third, taking away tbe keys of tbe building, $50; fourth, leaving tbe premises in a dirty and filthy condition, $75,— making a total of $5,025. A general denial to tbe counterclaim was-set forth in tbe reply. Tbe cause was tried before tbe court and a jury, and during tbe time of tbe trial plaintiff was permitted to amend bis complaint by adding thereto tbe following: “That said furniture and fixtures were especially adapted to said building and rooms and especially useful therein; that upon plaintiff’s eviction from said building as [413]*413.•above alleged there was ho other building or rooms in which to place said furniture, and the same were of no value in excess of the sum of $500, and the said plaintiff has sustained loss on said furniture and fixtures by reason of the foregoing in the sum of $1,000.” At the close ■of the ease, defendant, moved for a directed verdict, which not only leveled at plaintiff’s right to a verdict, but also asked for a verdict in. favor of the defendant for $135. This motion was overruled and the ruling properly excepted to. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $865.75, and the verdict shows that the same was arrived at as follows: Damages to plaintiff on hotel claim, $350; damages to plaintiff on furniture claim, $593.75. As against which the ■defendant was allowed: For loss of keys, $10, and for dirty condition of the premises when left, $68. Thereafter, certain exceptions were filed to the charge, in the following language only: “Comes now the defendant in the above-entitled action and excepts to the following provisions of the charge of the court, given to the jury in the above-entitled ■action, covering pages 7 to 16, inclusive, and reading as follows, to wit: - . . ” Then follows the paragraphs of the charge excepted to. No grounds for the exception were mentioned. Judgment was thereafter entered in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $865.75. From the judgment defendant appeals. In the statement of the case are found sixty-seven specifications of error, mostly with reference to the admission of testimony, and directly attacking its character as a proper mode of proving the damages claimed. No motion for a new trial was made, so that the matter comes before this court only to review the errors of law occurring at the trial.

1. Questions of fact cannot be reviewed by this court on appeal from & judgment in any action tried by a jury, unless a motion for a new trial was made in the court below. Rev. Codes 1905, § 7226; McNab v. Northern P. R. Co. 12 N. D. 568, 98 N. W. 353.

In justice to the learned judge who tried this case, it is only fair to suggest that if counsel had made a motion for a new trial, and thus .given the court below a chance to review the entire record, it is safe to say that the expense of an appeal would have been saved. The writer hereof, through long experience as a trial court, well knows the difficulties attendant upon a trial, where, as shown by the record herein, more care should have been given to the preparation of the pleadings [414]*414and the elimination of all those items, on both sides, which serious reflection would have shown could not have been allowed. While constant demand upon a busy practitioner’s time will often excuse lack of the most careful preparation for the actual trial of a case, it will not justify the trouble and expense incident to an appeal, without first, calling upon the court below to correct any errors which occurred at the trial.

2. The exceptions taken to the charge in this case cannot be considered. They should have pointed out some definite or specific defect in the character of the instructions given. Counsel should, by his objection, lay his finger on the precise point, or upon the precise request refused, or alleged error of the court. St. Croix Lumber Co. v. Pennington (1882) 2 Dak. 467, 11 N. W. 497.

3. There was competent evidence given both pro and con upon the question of whether the defendant had violated his contract with reference to the heat; and we cannot, in the absence of a motion for a new trial, pass upon the sufficiency of this evidence to warrant the finding that the defendant had failed to comply with the full terms of the contract in relation thereto, and must proceed, therefore, in the further examination of the case, assuming that the defendant had violated his contract.

4. Certain questions were asked, during the time of the trial, by counsel for the plaintiff, by which he sought to establish the amount of damages alleged to have been sustained during the time that he remained in the hotel; likewise questions attempting to prove the damages of the furniture as alleged in the amended paragraph of the complaint. To most all of these questions the defendant interposed the objection that the same were incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial, not constituting a proper measure of damages, and, in many eases, that the plaintiff was not competent to answer the question asked. Defendant further claims that an error was committed in refusing to grant the motion of defendant for a verdict. These alleged errors of law occurring at the trial are properly before us in the statement of the case, and must receive consideration at our hands.

5. Did the failure of defendant to furnish the heat according to his contract constitute in law a constructive eviction of plaintiff from the premises? Assuming, as we must in this case, that defendant was. [415]*415at fault in failing to furnish the heat contemplated in the contract, plaintiff was clearly within his rights, under subparagraph 1, § 5523,. Rev. Codes 1905, in terminating the same. “The hirer of a thing may terminate the hiring before the end of the term agreed upon: 1.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
133 N.W. 1030, 22 N.D. 410, 1911 N.D. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/russell-v-olson-nd-1911.