Valley Lumber Co. v. McGilvery

101 P. 94, 16 Idaho 338, 1908 Ida. LEXIS 141
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 101 P. 94 (Valley Lumber Co. v. McGilvery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Valley Lumber Co. v. McGilvery, 101 P. 94, 16 Idaho 338, 1908 Ida. LEXIS 141 (Idaho 1908).

Opinions

STEWART, J.

This canse was tried to a jury in the lower court and a verdict rendered for the defendants. This appeal is from the judgment and from an order overruling a motion for a new trial. The action is to recover the sum of $757.80 alleged to be due as a balance upon an account for merchandise claimed to have been sold by plaintiff to defendants in the sum of $1,114.51. The defendants denied the indebtedness and plead settlement and payment. The controversy arises out of the question whether an indebtedness due from C. F. Allen, president of the plaintiff company to the defendants, should be applied as part payment upon the account of the plaintiff against the defendants. The amount of this claim is $757.80, the amount for which this action is brought. It seems that C. F. Allen was the president of the Valley Lumber Company at the time the merchandise sued for was purchased; that at such time Allen was indebted to the defendants for merchandise claimed to have been purchased of defendants by Allen; the defendants contending that at the time the merchandise sued for was purchased, that bids were invited from different manufacturers of such goods, and that the plaintiff submitted a bid which was much higher than another bidder, and that defendants let the contract to plaintiff upon an agreement and understanding that the account defendants held against Allen should be taken by the plaintiff and credited as part payment upon the goods purchased by plaintiff from defendants. The defendants further contend that they sent a check to plaintiff for the sum of $356.71, which with the account of Allen, $757.80, paid the entire amount claimed to be due from them; that they accompanied the remittance with a statement of account showing the amount of such cheek, the amount of the Allen account, and that the two equaled and balanced the amount due from the defendants to plaintiff; that plaintiff accepted such check and retained [346]*346the same and made no objections to such statement or the contents thereof, and made no claim that the amount of said check and the Allen account did not balance or discharge in full the claim of plaintiff against these defendants.

Thus it will be seen that the entire controversy arises out of the Allen account; whether it should be offset against the account of plaintiff against these defendants. There was some argument on appeal whether the account of these defendants against Allen was in fact an account of Allen or whether said account was against the Lewiston Navigation Company, the owner of a steamboat, which was leased to Allen and to equip which the indebtedness was incurred for which the defendants claim Allen is liable.

The appellant makes two general assignments of error, which include many subdivisions. First, appellant contends that the evidence was insufficient to justify the verdict. Second, errors of law occurring at the trial. We will deal with these questions in the order in which counsel has presented them in his brief. First, is the evidence sufficient to support the verdict ? Before taking up' the evidence in detail for discussion, we are reminded by sec. 4824, Rev. Stat., as amended by Laws of 1907, p. 484, as follows: “Upon an appeal from a judgment, the court may review the verdict or decision and any intermediate order or decision, if excepted to, which involves the merits or necessarily affects the judgment, except a decision or order from which an appeal might have been taken: Provided, that whenever there is substantial evidence to support a verdict the same shall not be set aside.” With this provision of the statute to limit and guide the examination by this court of the evidence, we will briefly consider the evidence submitted to the jury and trial court.

We think the question of indebtedness of Allen to the defendants may be dismissed from consideration in this opinion with the statement that the evidence seems to prove such indebtedness beyond any question, and counsel for appellant, by silence at least, concedes that the evidence was sufficient to establish such indebtedness, as there is no discussion' [347]*347of this question in appellant’s brief. The argument of counsel for appellant, as to the insufficiency of the evidence, is based largely upon the contention that the evidence is insufficient to show that the plaintiff, a corporation, ever agreed to or did accept the indebtedness of Allen to the defendants as part payment for the bill of goods sold by plaintiff to the defendants, or, in other words, that the evidence is not sufficient to charge the plaintiff, a corporation, with the debt of another, to wit, its president. It seems from the testimony that the contract for the sale of the goods, for which this action was brought, was entered into between F. X. Prugger, vice-president and manager of the plaintiff company, upon behalf of the plaintiff, and Mr. D. J. MeGilvery upon behalf of the defendants. Mr. Allen, the president of the plaintiff company, was absent from the state at the time this contract was made, and the business of the plaintiff was being attended to and looked after by Mr. Prugger, the vice-president and general manager. Mr. Prugger testifies that he was vice-president of the plaintiff company, and had acted in the official capacity of vice-president ever since the organization of the company; that he was superintendent of the factory of the company and also a member of the board of directors, and was acting in the ‘capacity of superintendent and vice-president at the time the work was done for the defendants. Mr. McGilvery testified that he was in the office of the plaintiff company and asked Mr. Prugger for a bid for certain fixtures in the defendants’ store; that Mr. Prugger gave him a bid and McGilvery told him he thought the bid was too high, but that the defendants were willing to pay a little more for them at home and Prugger gave them a better bid; that the defendants got a bid from the Troy Lumber Company and called on Prugger and told him his bid was too high and showed him the bid of the Troy Lumber Company, about half his bid. He told Prugger that the defendants were' willing to pay him ten per cent or twelve per cent more and left the Troy Company’s bid. The witness.then said to Prugger: “You know Mr. Allen has a big account [348]*348with us and Mr. Hollister (secretary of the plaintiff company) knows that, because he has written Mr. Allen for me on this very thing.....If you get down anywhere it is right we will give you the job. We want to clean this up.....I told him that he knew that Mr. Allen had this large account and that we wanted this cleaned up. If we can get our fixtures and clean this up we will pay you $450 instead of $340. I believe it figures twenty-five per cent more, in order to get this cleaned up,” that is Allen’sv account: “I told Mr. Prugger that we were willing on the consideration this was cleaned up to give them $450 instead of $340 that we could have bought if from the other party.” Mr. Hollister, the secretary of the plaintiff company, testified that Mr. Prugger was the representative of the company at the time the sale was made. He was vice-president and was running the factory and made the sale to the defend-' ants. Mr. Prugger testified that there was nothing said at the time the contract was let to the Valley Lumber Company, that the Valley Lumber Company would receive any •part of the account, or any account of C. F. Allen that/ might be due McGilvery and Givens. He said: “I remember Mr. McGilvery handing me the Troy Lumber Company’s bid; it was considerable lower than the bid my company offered. Considerable lower than the work cost us.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
101 P. 94, 16 Idaho 338, 1908 Ida. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/valley-lumber-co-v-mcgilvery-idaho-1908.