Skogness v. Seger

160 N.W. 508, 35 N.D. 366, 1916 N.D. LEXIS 167
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 28, 1916
StatusPublished

This text of 160 N.W. 508 (Skogness v. Seger) 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
Skogness v. Seger, 160 N.W. 508, 35 N.D. 366, 1916 N.D. LEXIS 167 (N.D. 1916).

Opinion

Christianson, J.

This suit was originally commenced before H. P. Miller, a justice of the peace in Cass county, and resulted in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff. Defendant appealed from the judgment of the justice of the peace to the district court, and the cause was subsequently tried to a jury in the district court of Cass county and resulted in a verdict in favor of the defendant. The plaintiff appeals from the judgment entered pusuant to the verdict and from the order denying his motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or for a new trial.

The plaintiff’s complaint alleges that in May, 1915, the defendant gave plaintiff a written order' for marble posts, iron piping, chains, hooks, etc., to fence a certain cemetery lot 9x18 feet, and that pursuant to such contract the plaintiff shipped the material so ordered to the defendant at Leonard, North Dakota, and that “the defendant has at all times neglected and refused, and still does fail, neglect, and refuse, to accept and receive said fencing.” The defendant as an affirmative defense avers in his answer that on May 1, 1915, the plaintiff offered and agreed to furnish the defendant material to fence a certain cemetery lot 9x18 feet and deliver the same within a reasonable time to the defendant at Leonard, North Dakota. The material to consist of six light blue marble posts 5 feet long with holes 6 inches from the top to admit the insertion of a 2-inch pipe sufficient to go around the lot and to connect the posts' with the holes in the iron pipe, for twelve or more iron hooks to sustain an ornamental chain suspended below the iron pipes. That the plaintiff has never offered to deliver such material or any similar material, excepting white marble posts with holes for 1-J inch pipe, and with hooks for the iron pipe which were too large for the same and for the ornamental chain. That defendant could not use it and did not order it, or agree to pay for it.

The evidence shows that the plaintiff and defendant had a certain conversation regarding the fence in question, and that subsequently, on April 30, 1915, the plaintiff wrote the defendant the following letter:

“I have this evening looked up the prices on fences and I can furnish you with a fence 6 posts 5 feet high and 6 inches square in marble and [368]*368chains and pipes for the lot for $75 and the same fence in granite for $95. The marble posts come in light blue and are most generally used in fences where chains and pipes are used. The granite posts come higher as they are harder to work down smooth. If you should decide to get a fence I shall be glad to hear from you.”

Defendant thereafter replied thereto as follows: “Leonard, May 5. If you accept my offer try and get them here before Decoration Day. If you like you can send me the fencing for my lot, which is 8 by 18 feet, 6 marble posts 6 by 6 inches square, 5 feet length, light blue galvanized pipe, l-£ inch chains and tassels. Fencing all complete. Delivered -at Leonard f. o. b. for $75, payable six months. Pipe about 4 inches from top of post. Chain sag between post 8 inches, not over ten.”

It is undisputed that the contract or order for the material involved in this controversy is evidenced solely by these two letters. The plaintiff subsequently shipped certain fencing to the defendant, and on July 19, 1915, the defendant wrote the plaintiff as follows: “I am sorry to tell you that only part of the fencing has come yet, and what is here is not what I expected to see according to my order. I am very much disappointed, do not like it one bit. Now what is to be done about it ?”

And on July 29, 1915, the defendant sent the plaintiff the following letter: “I was to Leonard station and examined the fencing I ordered from you, and it is not what I ordered, by far, and I will not accept it.”

The plaintiff testifies that upon receiving the- letters from the defendant, he went to Leonard, where he met the defendant at the station, and that they together examined the different parts of the fencing and found that the hooks were too large, and that the plaintiff thereupon went to a. blacksmith at Leonard and ordered different hooks, but that the defendant then and there “refused me to take the fence out and set it up.”

Dpon the trial in the district court, the defendant brought into court and introduced in evidence one of the marble posts, one of the galvanized pipes, and some of the hooks, and these were offered and received in evidence and considered by the jury, and while these exhibits are referred to in the court’s certificate settling the statement of case, they have not been forwarded to this court, and consequently cannot be examined by us. The plaintiff in his testimony contended that the [369]*369posts really complied with the terms of the order and. were -light- blue marble posts, whereas the defendant, on the contrary, contended .that they were not light blue, but were white, and to substantiate his testimony produced and offered in evidence one of the posts. There was also testimony on the part of the defendant tending to show that the pipes did not fit, and that certain parts of the material had never been shipped. It was conceded that the hooks sent by the plaintiff were too large and could not be used, and while the plaintiff directed a blacksmith at Leonard to prepare other hooks, it is admitted that plaintiff subsequently, upon defendant’s refusal to accept the fence, notified the blacksmith not to make such hooks.

Upon the issues as thus framed under the pleadings and the proof, the court submitted the cause to the jury, which returned a verdict in favor of the defendant. -

Plaintiff’s first assignment of error relates to the admission in evidence of the marble post, galvanized pipe, and hooks. Plaintiff argues that these exhibits were not admissible unless it was first shown that defendant had returned or offered to return the material, for the fence to the plaintiff, and he contends that no such showing was made in this case. Plaintiff’s argument-, while purporting to be directed to -the question of the admissibility of this evidence, in reality goes to. the merits of defendant’s defense. Plaintiff contends that the defendant received and retained the property in his possession, and that, consequently, under the provisions of § 5936, Comp. Laws 1913, and-the decision of this court in Houghton Implement Co. v. Yavrosky, 15 N. H. 308, 109 N. W. 1024, defendant, in order to effect a rescission of the contract, was required to promptly return or tender a return of the property to the plaintiff.

Plaintiff’s argument is based upon an assumed statement of facts which does not exist in this case. There is not an iota of evidence tending to show that the defendant ever received into his possession any of the material involved in this controversy. In fact in plaintiff’s complaint it is alleged that “the defendant has at all times neglected and refused, and still does fail, neglect, and refuse, to accept and receive said fencing and this allegation in the complaint was supported by the testimony of the plaintiff and also by the testimony of the- defendant upon the trial: Plaintiff contends, however, that-the-production [370]*370by the defendant of this material, and certain statements made by the defendant’s counsel in his opening statement to the jury, show that the defendant bad received and taken such property into bis possession. The record, however, discloses two statements made by the defendant’s counsel during the course of the trial absolutely to the contrary.

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Related

Houghton Implement Co. v. Vavrosky
109 N.W. 1024 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1906)
Sunshine Cloak & Suit Co. v. Roquette Bros.
152 N.W. 359 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1915)
Starke v. Stewart
157 N.W. 302 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1916)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
160 N.W. 508, 35 N.D. 366, 1916 N.D. LEXIS 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skogness-v-seger-nd-1916.