Spaulding v. Pitts

127 N.W. 610, 26 S.D. 78, 1910 S.D. LEXIS 139
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 8, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 127 N.W. 610 (Spaulding v. Pitts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spaulding v. Pitts, 127 N.W. 610, 26 S.D. 78, 1910 S.D. LEXIS 139 (S.D. 1910).

Opinion

SMITH, J.

Appeal from the circuit court of Pennington county. Action on promissory note dated September io, 1902, due December 20, 1903, given for a balance on the purchase price of a carriage. The defendant, answering, denies the execution of the note sued on, alleges as a counterclaim that the plaintiff on or about the 10th day of September, 1902, offered to sell the defendant a two-seated carriage, with leather top, of plaintiff’s own make and manufacture; that plaintiff warranted and represented to defendant that said carriage was of the very best material used in the construction of that class of vehicles, and that the workmanship thereon was first class, and then and there guaranteed and promised defendant that, with reasonable usage, the defendant could use and run the same for a period of five years without any repairs thereon; that defendant, relying upon said representations and warranty, -then and there purchased said carriage, and agreed to pay plaintiff therefor the sum of $150, $75 in 6 months, and 73 in 12 months; that at the time of the sale and warranty said carriage was poorly constructed, of unsound, defective and worthless material, and workmanship of the poorest quality and grade, which facts were well known to plaintiff, and that because of said unsound and defective material and inferior workmanship the top of said carriage racked, warped, and broke to pieces, so that the same could not be used, the bed spread, cracked, broke, and became worthless, the spokes of the wheels [80]*80cracked and broke, one of the wheels broke to- pieces so that a new wheel had to be purchased by defendant and substituted therefor, all of which occurred while said carriage was being used in a careful and reasonable manner by defendant in traveling the public roads and highways, and_ while the said carriage was being kept in good condition and carefully housed when not in use; that at the time of said warranty and sale said carriage, by reason of the defects aforesaid, was not worth to exceed $25; that on or about the 1st day of July, 1903, the defendant paid plaintiff the sum of $75, with interest, in all the sum of $81.25, as part of the purchase price of the carriage; that since the purchase of said carriage defendant expended in money, labor, and time in making-repairs thereon the sum of $20, aggregating the sum of $101.25 paid by defendant for said carriage, and the repairs thereon; that defendant was injured and damaged in the sum of $76.25, and prays a dismissal of plaintiff’s complaint and a judgment upon his counterclaim against the plaintiff. Plaintiff replied to this counterclaim. The issues were tried to a jury and a verdict returned in favor of defendant and against plaintiff, assessing defendant’s damage at $1. Thereafter plaintiff moved for a new trial, which was denied, and a judgment entered for defendant on the 6th day of March, 1908, for the sum of $1' damages with $49.15 costs and disbursements. From the judgment and the order overruling the motion for a new trial, plaintiff appeals.

Numerous assignments of error appear in the record, the most important of which are discussed in appellant’s brief. Following the practice of this court, we shall consider only those discussed. Appellant’s first contention is that it appears by the undisputed evidence that the defendant signed and made the note in question. The defendant in his answer expressly “denies that he ever made, executed, or delivered to plaintiff or to any one on its behalf the alleged promissory note mentioned and described in the complaint.” The jury by their general verdict found all the issues in favor of the defendant, including the issue as to the execution of the note. Upon the trial the plaintiff offered and read in evidence the depositions of three witnesses, two of whom H. W. Spaulding- and E- H. Spaulding, were residents of the [81]*81state of Iowa, each of whom testified, in substance, that he was a member of the plaintiff firm, and that the plaintiff did on September io, 1902, by its authorized agent, W. C. Morgan, sell to defendant a spring wagon for the sum of $150 and received in settlement therefor two promissory notes executed by Henry L,. Pitts, defendant in this case, for $75 each. This evidence appears to have been received without objection, and the note was offered and received in evidence without objection. The deposition of W. C. Morgan, the agent who sold the wagon to defendant, and who wrote and received the two promissory notes from defendant, was also offered in evidence. So far as the record discloses, he was asked no questions and gave no testimony concerning the signing and execution of the note in suit. The deposition of one Passwater was offered and received in evidence, who testified that he was a collector for plaintiff during the month of August, 1904; that he was acquainted with defendant and met him on two occasions, the 19th and the 25th of August, 1904; that he was then collecting for plaintiff, and called upon defendant with reference to the note which is in controversy; that he had a conversation with defendant in which defendant denied his signature to the note, but that later in the conversation defendant agreed to go to Rapid City on the following Monday and get a draft in settlement of the note and send the same to the witness at Custer City; that, not receiving the draft, he returned to see defendant on the 25th of August; that defendant at that time refused to pay the note. No other evidence appears in the record on behalf of the plaintiff touching the issue raised by the pleadings as to the execution of the note in suit. Defendant was sworn as a witness, and, being shown the note sued upon, testified that he did give the plaintiff a promissory note, but that the note marked “Exhibit A” was not the note that he signed; that the note which he 'signed differed considerably from 'that sued upon; that no instructions were printed on the note which he signed, and that it was written in pencil, while the note offered in evidence appears to have been written in ink; that the note he signed was simply a note for $75 bearing 7 per cent, interest, while the note sued upon [82]*82bears 8 per cent, interest. He further testified that he saw the note Exhibit A for the first time a short time after December 20, 1903, and at that time notified the bank that it was not his note.

The question of the sufficiency of this evidence to sustain the finding of the jury was before the trial court upon the motion for a new -trial, and. was passed upon when the motion for a new trial was overruled. That there was a material conflict in the evidence as to the execution of the note in suit is plainly apparent, and, that the issue having been determined by the jury in favor of the defendant and the trial court having refused to disturb the verdict of the jury,- the question of the sufficiency of the evidence cannot be considered by this court upon appeal. This rule is so firmly settled by many decisions of this court we deem it unnecessary to refer to them. The note sued upon is in the form of a sales note, and contains stipulations concerning the attorney’s fees, and a statement that the defendant owned - acres of land worth $1,000, on which there is no incumbrance; that there are no judgments against him, and that he makes this statement for the purpose -of obtaining credit; and that the ownership of the vehicle sold shall not pass from the Spaulding Manufacturing Company until fully paid for. It also- contains this specific provision: “No salesman is authorized to- make any' agreement not upon the face of this note when made.”

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Bluebook (online)
127 N.W. 610, 26 S.D. 78, 1910 S.D. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spaulding-v-pitts-sd-1910.