Thompson v. Bown Live Stock Co.

276 P. 651, 74 Utah 1, 1929 Utah LEXIS 1
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 4, 1929
DocketNo 4652.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 276 P. 651 (Thompson v. Bown Live Stock Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. Bown Live Stock Co., 276 P. 651, 74 Utah 1, 1929 Utah LEXIS 1 (Utah 1929).

Opinions

*3 GIDEON, J.

The controversy here related to the ownership of 484 bonds of the Green River irrigation district, of the par value of $100 each, and alleged to be of the actual value of $15 each. Plaintiffs are Cecil Thompson and A. H. Stevenson, Jr., administrators of the estate of E. W. Hulse, deceased, and H. B. Cole. The defendants are the Bown Live Stock Company, L. J. Cullen personally, and L. J. Cullen, agent, W. D. Thompson, W. C. Snow, A. M. Myrup, and Walker Bros., Bankers. W. C. Snow was president of the live stock company at the time of the sale of its interest in the bonds to plaintiffs, and as such carried on the negotiations which resulted in the sale. Ownership and right to possession of the property on the part of plaintiffs is alleged in the complaint.

This case was first tried during the year 1926 before a jury in the district court of Salt Lake county. The jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff, and judgment was entered on that verdict. Thereafter defendants filed a motion for a new trial. In this motion five grounds were specified as reasons why a new trial should be granted. In September, 1927, the court granted the motion for a new trial, without designating on which ground it was granted. In 1927 the case again came on for hearing. A jury was impaneled and plaintiffs submitted their evidence and rested. Defendants separately interposed motions for non-suit. The court, on its own motion, ruled that the questions involved in the case and the issues are cognizable only in a court of equity, and not in a case at law. Over appellants’ objections the jury was dismissed. Defendants’ motions for nonsuit were denied, and the court proceeded to hear the evidence. Thereupon findings of fact and conclusions of law were prepared. Judgment in favor of defendants was entered, dismissing the complaint of plaintiffs. Motion for a new trial was then filed by plaintiffs. This motion was overruled. Plaintiffs appeal.

*4 Hon. M. L. Ritchie presided at the first trial, and he made the order granting the new trial. The second trial was had before Hon. William McCrea. On or about April 28, 1927, plaintiffs filed a motion before Judge Ritchie, asking that the order of September 14, 1926, granting defendants a new trial, be vacated, and that the judgment entered on the verdict of the jury, rendered on the first trial and dated May 22, 1926, be reinstated and permitted to stand as the judgment of the court. At a later date this motion was argued. The same was by the court denied. The proceedings had at the first trial, the motion to reinstate, the order denying this motion, and the proceedings of the second trial are all included, settled, and made a part of the bill of exceptions now before us.

The numerous errors assigned by appellants are divided into four groups and are so argued. In appellants’ brief such grouping is stated thus:

“(1) The court erred, in granting defendants’ motion for a new trial on September 14, 1926, following the verdict and judgment in appellants’ favor at the first trial, and in denying appellants’ motion, on June 18, 1927, to set aside the order granting such new trial and to reinstate the verdict of the jury and the judgment entered thereon.
“(2) Errors of the court at the second trial in the improper admission of certain evidence over plaintiffs’ objections and exceptions.
“(3) Error at the second trial in dismissing the jury over plaintiffs’ objections and exceptions, and denying plaintiffs the right to finish the trial of the controverted issues of fact growing out of the law action to a jury. ■
“(4) That the findings of the court at the second trial are not supported by the evidence and that the conclusions and judgment are contrary to law.”

We shall first consider the assigned errors referred to in subdivision 1 of the above. There was conflict in the evidence submitted to the jury at the first trial. One of the grounds urged in the motion for a new trial was insufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict. A wide discretion is permitted trial courts in weigh *5 ing evidence on motions for new trials where the evidence is in conflict. As stated by the Supreme Court of Washington in Eyak River Packing Co. v. Huglen, 143 Wash. 243, 255 P., at page 129: “The trial court can grant a new trial on conflicting evidence, because such a motion invokes a compound of the discretionary and judicial functions of the court.” Such has been the recognized rule in this jurisdiction. Respondents invoke this rule, and the following Utah cases in support of the same are by them cited: White v. Union Pac. R. Co., 8 Utah 56, 29 P. 1030; Davis v. Southern Pac. R. Co., 3 Utah 218, 2 P. 521; Collet v. Beutler, 27 Utah 541, 76 P. 707; Valiotis v. Utah-Apex M. Co., 55 Utah 151, 184 P. 802; Perrin v. Union Pac. R. Co., 59 Utah 1, 201 P. 405. In addition, the ruling of the court in granting a new trial was not error for other reasons, which will appear later in this opinion.

The assigned errors referred to in subdivision 2 of the above relate to the admission of certain testimony over plaintiffs’ objections. Defendant Snow was called by plaintiffs to identify his signature and to prove his right as president of the Bown Live Stock Company to execute a bill of sale transferring to plaintiffs the interest of the live stock company in the matter in controversy. He identified his signature and testified that he had executed the paper on behalf of the company. Defendants’ counsel was permitted, on cross-examination, to interrogate this witness as to the transactions leading up to the sale at some length, and as to what was said between the parties at the time. This line of testimony was strenuously objected to by appellants, as not being within the rights of the defendant in cross-examination.

We are of the opinion that the court was too liberal in permitting defendants’ counsel to cover matters not included in direct or cross-examination. But the matters testified to by Mr. Snow were covered by other testimony in the record, and, while the court should not have permitted the defense to attempt to prove its case by cross- *6 examination of this witness, in view of the limited testimony adduced from him on direct examination by appellants, its action in this respect was not so erroneous as to work a reversal of the judgment. Thus we find that the assigned errors referred to in the foregoing subdivisions 1 and 2 should not prevail.

Much of appellants’ brief is devoted to a discussion of the trial court’s order dismissing the jury after plaintiffs had submitted their proof and had rested. Appellants contend that by such order they were denied the right to have the issues of fact determined by a jury; also that this action is one at law, and not a suit in equity. Did the trial court err in its ruling this to be an equity case, and not one at law? We think not.

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Bluebook (online)
276 P. 651, 74 Utah 1, 1929 Utah LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-bown-live-stock-co-utah-1929.