Walker v. Newton

10 N.W. 436, 53 Wis. 336, 1881 Wisc. LEXIS 251
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 3, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 10 N.W. 436 (Walker v. Newton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker v. Newton, 10 N.W. 436, 53 Wis. 336, 1881 Wisc. LEXIS 251 (Wis. 1881).

Opinion

Taylor, J.

Upon this appeal no point is made upon any of the findings of fact of the referee, or rulings of the circuit court thereon, so far as they relate to the amounts found due to the respondent upon his several claims against the appellant; but exceptions were taken to the refusal of the referee to find in favor of the appellant that he was entitled to a credit upon the several claims of the respondent for two items: one, $71.24, which the appellant claims he had paid to one Wilbur, one of the respondent’s workmen, and $22.75, which he claims to have paid to the firm of Athouse & Co. for work done for the respondent in the preparation of lumber, etc., in doing the work. Tiñese charges of the appellant were rejected by the referee and by the circuit court. .

The answer of the appellant alleges payment of all the claims of the respondent, and- there are no other allegations in the answer under which proof of the payment of these claims would be admissible. There was no application to amend the answer on the trial before the referee, or in the circuit court. The answer alleges that the defendant had paid to the plaintiff for and on account of his work the sum of $573.61, “ inclusive of payments made at the special instance and request of the plaintiff, and for which the defendant had become liable to other parties who had performed work and labor for the plaintiff in and about said business.” The evidence of the payment of the two items' above specified to- Wilbur and At-[339]*339house & Go. was admissible under this allegation, and under no other in. the answer; and the only question for the referee and circuit court was to pass upon the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the claim that these two items were paid with the knowledge and assent of the respondent. Upon this question of fact the referee found against the appellant, and such finding was affirmed by the circuit court. The learned counsel for the appellant asks this coutt to reverse that finding of fact upon the evidence; but at the same” time he very candidly admits that to do so it will be necessary to examine at length and carefully the written bill of exceptions, containing all the evidence, without the aid of a printed case to aid in the search for evidence tending to show the error of the referee and circuit court. This court, we think, is not called upon to search out the evidence from the written bill of exceptions to demonstrate that a finding of fact by a referee or court is not supported by the evidence. If it be charged by the appellant that a finding of fact is contrary to the clear preponderance of the evidence, or is not supported by the evidence, it is the duty of the appellant to show affirmatively that it is so unsupported. The error is not to be presumed. The printed case should in such case contain all the evidence bearing upon the question, or such references should be made to the written bill of exceptions as would enable this court to find the evidence without laborious search. Although we are of the opinion that we were not called upon, by the case made by the appellant’s printed case and brief, to search for the error complained of in the mass of evidence contained in the bill of exceptions, we have taken the trouble to examine the bill in order to discover, if- we could, whether the evidence was so clear that these payments had been, made by the appellant, with the knowledge or consent of the respondent, either express or implied, as to call upon this court to reverse the finding of fact as being against the clear preponderance of the evidence. In that search we have encountered the difficulty suggested by [340]*340the learned counsel for the appellant, and have found that the grains of evidence bearing upon this question- are so isolated and distributed through a great mass bearing upon the other questions litigated, that it is difficult to bring them together so as to present them with any degree of force or clearness upon the question to be determined.

Upon the question of the item claimed to have been paid to Athouse & Co., if we understand the evidence, the claim that it has been paid by the appellant is far from being established. The evidence seems to show that it has not been paid at all, but has been charged to the appellaht upon the books of the firm and remains still unsettled for; and there is no evidence that the respondent had any knowledge of the fact that the same was so charged, or that he had ever in any way assented thereto. The finding upon this item is clearly not against the weight of evidence, so far as we have been able to ascertain from the record. As to the item claimed to have been paid to "Wilbur there-is more evidence; and if we have clearly comprehended the -force of it, we certainly would not have reversed the finding of the referee if-he had found that it was paid with the assent of the respondent. The course of dealing, the manner in which the other men were paid, the fact that the respondent furnished the bill of "Wilbur’s work with the amount due him per day, and other evidence tending to show that there might have been an implied agreement that the appellant should pay the amount due him, would, we think, support a finding that the payment to him was made with the assent of the respondent. On the other hand, the respondent testifies that it was not paid with his assent. It also appears that nearly all the other payments were made upon the written orders of the respondent, and that the appellant admits it was paid without any written or verbal direction of the respondent; and the other fact that he claims it was paid because he had agreed with "Wilbur, before he commenced work, that he would see him paid for his work, might well have been taken [341]*341into consideration by the referee in determining the question. There is another fact appearing in the record which might have had a bearing upon this question, viz., that Wilbur’s bill for his wages is receipted by him as paid several weeks after the action was commenced. Whilst this receipt is not conclusive against the claim made in a general way in the evidence of the appellant that he paid the $71.24 on the 19th of December, and before the action was commenced, still it was a fact in the case which, unexplained, might justly have some weight in the determination of the question. Erom all the light we have been able to derive from our search of the record, we are unable to say that the finding of the referee that the payment of $71.24 was not made with the knowledge and consent, express or implied, of the respondent, is against the clear preponderance of the evidence.

The learned counsel for the appellant, waiving the question whether the payment was made with the assent of respondent, insists that, Wilbur having done the work for the respondent upon appellant’s building, for which work Wilbur might have claimed a lien upon the building in .case respondent had refused or neglected to pay him, he was authorized to pay Wilbur the amount due for his wages without the knowledge or consent of his employer, and charge the amount so paid to him as money paid for his use and at his request; that the law in such case would imply a request. He bases this proposition upon the claim that in all cases where a contractor to erect a building for another employs other workmen to help him do the. work, the owner of the building is secondarily liable for the payment of the men so employed. We think this claim is unfounded.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 N.W. 436, 53 Wis. 336, 1881 Wisc. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-newton-wis-1881.