Ward v. Spelts & Klosterman

58 N.W. 426, 39 Neb. 809, 1894 Neb. LEXIS 102
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 21, 1894
DocketNo. 5306
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 58 N.W. 426 (Ward v. Spelts & Klosterman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ward v. Spelts & Klosterman, 58 N.W. 426, 39 Neb. 809, 1894 Neb. LEXIS 102 (Neb. 1894).

Opinion

Ragan, C.

Spelts & Klosterman sued Mike Ward in the district of Seward county for damages for his failure to deliver to them three thousand bushels of corn, in pursuance of a contract in words and figures as follows:

“In consideration of $50 this day to me in hand paid by Spelts & Klosterman, and interest thereon at ten per [811]*811cent per annum until fulfillment of this contract, I hereby sell and convey unto the said Spelts & Klosterman 3,000 bushels of good, sound, dry, shelled corn at 23J cents a bushel, the same being now on a certain quarter section of land, and agree to deliver the same in good order at Ulysses, Nebraska, at buyer’s option, in the months of July and August, A. D. 1890. Dated this 31st day of June, 1890.
his
“Mikr x Ward.”
mark.

Spelts & Klosterman pleaded that they had on the dale of the execution of said writing paid Ward the $50; that Ward had delivered them only 250 bushels of corn; that they had demanded of Ward a delivery of the corn pursuant to said contract; that he had failed and refused to deliver; and that the corn, at the time and place it should have been delivered, was worth forty cents a bushel, and by reason of Ward’s failure to comply with the agreement they had been damaged. Ward’s defense, so far as material here, was that on the 1st day of July, 1890, he received from Spelts & Klosterman $52.50 in money, and at that time he agreed to sell and deliver to them, at twenty-three and one-half cents per bushel, sufficient corn to repay said money, and that he further agreed that if lie had any other grain to spare he would sell the same to Spelts & Klosterman at the same price; that the agent of Spelts & Klosterman made a memorandum in writing, which he, Ward, supposed embraced the contract between him and Spelts & Klosterman and was his receipt for the money he had received of them; that said agent presented the memorandum to him, Ward, and informed him that .it embraced the agreement to deliver sufficient grain to pay ■ the $52.50 and any other grain that Ward might be able to spare; that he, Ward, could neither read nor write, and was induced to and did sign said memorandum believing the contract embraced the agreement actually made between him and Spelts & Klosterman. The case was tried to a jury [812]*812and a verdict returned against Ward; and he brings the judgment rendered on such verdict here for review.

1. The first assignment of error relates to the memorandum or contract sued on and quoted above. The objection urged to this memorandum or agreement is that by it Spelts & Klosterman were not bound to do anything and that therefore, as a contract, it lacks mutuality. The agreement recites that in consideration of $50 received from Spelts & Klosterman, Ward had sold them 3,000 bushels of corn, which he agreed to deliver at a future date. Spelts & Klosterman having accepted this agreement, became bound to accept and pay for the corn on its delivery as therein provided, as much so as if the agreement had, in express terms, provided that they would accept anti pay for the corn at the time and place and at the price named. The agreement was not wanting in mutuality. By the contract Ward agreed to deliver the -corn to the persons with whom he made this agreement, and because of their acceptance of the agreement the law raised a promise on their part to accept and pay for the corn when delivered according to the contract. (Justice v. Lang, 42 N. Y., 493; Weightman v. Caldwell, 4 Wheat, [U. S.], 84.)

2. The second error alleged is the giving by the court to the jury of an instruction as follows: “The defendant having admitted signing the contract under which the plaintiff claims, before he can avoid said written contract on the ground of. fraud practiced upon him, because he could not read it, he must satisfy you that he was not negligent or careless in affixing his signature by mark to said writing, and that if he made his mark thereto without asking to have the contents read to him or to be told what the contents of the writing were, but so affixed his signature thereto on request of plaintiff’s agent without anything further being said or done to induce him to sign it, then in that case he should be held to have duly made said contract and should be bound by the terms thereof.” The princi[813]*813pal question litigated in the case was whether the contract sued on was the contract made between Ward and Spelts ■& Klosterman through their agent. The testimony offered by Ward tended to prove that he could neither read nor write; that he contracted with Spelts & Klosterman to deliver them, not 3,000 bushels of corn, but a sufficient quantity to amount to $52.50 at twenty-three and one-half cents per bushel, and more corn at the same price if he ascertained he could spare it. It was not disputed that the agent of Spelts & Klosterman wrote the contract sued on, and that Ward signed it by making his mark. The instruction complained of told the jury, in effect, that if the agent of Spelts & Klosterman practiced a fraud on Ward by putting into writing a different contract from the one actually made, then, if Ward signed such contract at the request of the agent, without asking to have the contract read to him, that he was bound by it. This instruction was erroneous. The suit on this contract is between the original parties thereto, and Ward is liable for damages for his failure to perform the contract he made, not for his failure to perform the contract he did not make; but, by the instruction given, the jury are told that if he neglected to have this contract read over to him he is bound by it, simply because he signed it. Suppose that Ward had contracted to sell Spelts & Klosterman 3,000 bushels of grain at twenty-three and one-half cents per bushel, and that the agent had drawn up the contract and made it read 3,000 bushels of corn at three cents per bushel, and that Ward had been able to read and write and had signed the contract, supposing that the agent had drawn it correctly. Can it be true that because Ward was careless or negligent in not reading the contract for himself that the party who thus perpetrated a fraud upon him could take advantage of that fraud? Ward’s negligence or carelessness in affixing his signature or mark to this contract has nothing whatever to do with his liability on it. If the written contract [814]*814which he signed embraced the contract which he made, he is liable upon it. If it does not embrace the contract he made, he is not liable. (State Ins. Co. v. Jordan, 29 Neb., 514.) But it is said that this instruction was copied from an instruction found in Cole Brothers v. Williams, 12 Neb., 440, and that the instruction copied from has been approved by this court. In that case one Williams sued Cole Brothers & Hart for a bill of goods. Cole Brothers & Hart filed a set-off for $404 for putting lightning rods on the house of Williams in pursuance of a written order attached to their answer.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 N.W. 426, 39 Neb. 809, 1894 Neb. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ward-v-spelts-klosterman-neb-1894.