Thompson v. Clay

27 N.W. 699, 60 Mich. 627, 1886 Mich. LEXIS 623
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 27 N.W. 699 (Thompson v. Clay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan 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. Clay, 27 N.W. 699, 60 Mich. 627, 1886 Mich. LEXIS 623 (Mich. 1886).

Opinion

Morse, J.

This is an action in assumpsit, brought to recover about 253.000 feet of pine logs, at five dollars per thousand.

Plaintiff alleges that he sold the logs, at the price above stated, to defendant, through one Daniel M. Adams, claimed to be acting as agent of the defendant. He testifies that he contracted with said Adams for the sale to defendant of all the pine timber that should be cut from a certain piece of land, and which Mr. Cody, agreed upon as the scaler, would accept, at five dollars per thousand feet, delivered in the Muskegon river, and that he was to receive pay as fast as he got 100,000 feet afloat.

He also claims that he hired one Adolphus Berry to put the logs in, and was to pay him at the rate of three dollars per thousand for the job.

The defendant claims that he did not authorize Adams to contract for or purchase the logs on his account; that Adams [630]*630was not his general agent for buying logs, but was the agent of the Newaygo Company, a corporation then organized and existing under the laws of this State, of which company defendant was president and general manager; that Adams-did not buy the logs of plaintiff,-but purchased them of said Adolphus Berry, who claimed to have bought the timber of plaintiff; that Adams bought the logs for the Newaygo Company, and that they were delivered to and received by that company, who were to and did pay Berry three dollars per thousand in full for his share, and to credit and did credit, by Berry’s direction, with plaintiff’s consent, two dollars per thousand upon their boobs to plaintiff for his share; that plaintiff traded at the store of the company a portion of his account, leaving at the time of the trial a balance upon the company’s boobs in favor of plaintiff of $198.39, which the company was ready and willing to pay.

Upon this issue the case went to the jury, who found a general verdict for plaintiff in the sum of $1,343.24, and also-found specially, in answer to questions propounded by plaintiff’s'counsel, that the sale of the logs in question was made by the plaintiff to the defendant, and that Adams bought the' logs for the defendant.

Numerous errors are assigned in relation to the admission of certain testimony on the trial.

The plaintiff was allowed to testify that a certain conversation which he had some two months before the alleged sale of these logs with defendant (which conversation he had detailed to the jury) assisted him in forming an opinion that Adams was acting as the agent of defendant in buying the logs in question. The answer was given in answer to a direct question put by his counsel, against objection.

The jury were the proper judges as to what effect-this conversation had, or ought to have had, upon plaintiff as to inducing him to believe Adams to be the agent of defendant; and it was error to permit plaintiff to state such effect.

The testimony of John Kinney that he sold defendant some logs in October, 1883, two months after the contract claimed in this case, could have done the defendant no harm, [631]*631as he himself admitted buying some logs during that year on his own account. It was not relevant to the issue, but it could have affected in no way the question in dispute, to wit, the agency of Adams, and was therefore a harmless error.

The witness Adams should have been permitted on redirect examination to have fully answered the following question:

“Question. Weil, in relation to the Hoag & Gidley contract, and that Bonner contract, how was it that they came to be made with D. P. Clay instead of the Newaygo Company ?”

The matter of these contracts had been drawn out by plaintiffs counsel, and defendant was manifestly entitled to a full explanation of them. We are not sure but he was afforded the opportunity, however, as the record is very blind, and not as full as it ought to have been on this subject. It seems the question was at first denied by the circuit judge, but after-wards he said:

“As I understand that these contracts were executed by Mr. Adams, and it is claimed by special authority or special arrangement, and that ho had no general authority to make the contracts, and they wish to show that, let the jury have the testimony on both sides.”

The witness then testified in relation to the execution of some other contracts, but gave no evidence, as appears from the record, as to the contracts mentioned in the question. It appears to us, however, that, under the language of the court above quoted, permission was granted him to do so, and that defendant’s counsel miglit have availed himself of the privilege had he seen fit to do so.

The defendant offered in evidence the deposition of one William II. Sharpnack, taken pursuant to section 7475 of Howell’s Statutes, before Paul Brown, a notary public in and for Cook county, state of Illinois. At the taking of said deposition both parties to this suit appeared by their respective counsel. There was no certificate attached to the deposition showing the official capacity of the notary, as required by the statute. The deposition was received and filed June [632]*6322, 1S85. The trial commenced June 9, 1885, but no showing was made that any notice of the reception of the deposition -was served upon the counsel for plaintiff under rule 51 of the circuit court.

The deposition was properly rejected. The proceeding being in derogation of the common law, and the deposition being admissible only by reason of the statute, its terms must be complied with. The argument that the counsel for plaintiff attended upon the taking of the testimony is not tenable. Such attendance could not be regarded as a waiver of any requisite of the statute to be complied with in the return of the deposition. It is also urged that the notarial seal of the officer affixed to his return is a sufficient compliance with the object and purpose of the statute; but the record does not show tliat any such seal was affixed.

Objection is also made to the evidence given in rebuttal of plaintiff, Adolphus Berry, and one Louis Topping, as to the contract between Berry and plaintiff in regard to putting in the logs. This testimony was offered and given, it is claimed, to rebut the claim made by defendant that Berry bought the logs of plaintiff, and to show that Berry did not so buy the logs, but entered into a contract with plaintiff to put them in the river at three dollars per thousand, as claimed by plaintiff. Defendant was not present at this conversation, nor was Adams, who purchased the logs.

We do not think this evidence was admissible. The issue was whether Adams bought the logs of Berry or of Thompson. It was entirely immaterial what talk or agreement Berry and plaintiff had, not in the presence of Adams or defendant, and unknown to them. The defendant offered and gave no evidence to disprove this alleged arrangement between plaintiff and Berry, to which plaintiff testified in his primary case. He contented himself with testimony tending to show that Berry sold the logs as his own.

This proof of a contract between plaintiff and Berry tended to rebut no part of the case made by defendant, and, taking place without the knowledge of defendant or his alleged agent, could have no binding force upon him. Yet [633]*633the jury were allowed to use the fact of such an agreement as evidence that defendant did not purchase of Berry, but of plaintiff.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Douglass & Varnum v. Village of Morrisville
95 A. 810 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1915)
Williams v. Otto
148 N.W. 367 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1914)
School Town of Andrews v. Heiney
98 N.E. 628 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1912)
Colton v. Rupert
27 N.W. 520 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1886)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 N.W. 699, 60 Mich. 627, 1886 Mich. LEXIS 623, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-clay-mich-1886.