Young v. Carignan

129 A.2d 216, 152 Me. 332, 1957 Me. LEXIS 12
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJanuary 31, 1957
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 129 A.2d 216 (Young v. Carignan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Young v. Carignan, 129 A.2d 216, 152 Me. 332, 1957 Me. LEXIS 12 (Me. 1957).

Opinion

Williamson, C. J.

In this action the plaintiff seeks to recover ’for breach of an oral contract with the defendant wherein the latter promised to make a certain investment in behalf of his son. The case is before us, after verdict for the plaintiff, on motion for a new trial and on exceptions.

In our view the verdict must be set aside for error in a ruling reaching the decisive question of the terms of the contract. The ruling was made in the course of the argument of defendant’s counsel to the jury.

On the point in issue the jury found in substance the following :

In May 1951 the plaintiff and the defendant’s son purchased a tractor and refrigerator trailer under a conditional sale agreement for $16,500. The plaintiff paid $5,000 in cash to the seller and the plaintiff and defendant’s son agreed in writing to pay $5,610.64 in 60 days and to assume a prior claim upon the property held by a Chicago bank in the amount of $5,889.36. The agreement between plaintiff and defendant in substance was that if the plaintiff would enter into business with defendant’s son and advance $5,000 toward the cost of the equipment, the defendant within 60 days would invest $5,000 in the business for his son’s share by payment on the amount due from the plaintiff and defendant’s son to the seller. At the defendant’s request, the seller extended the time for payment an additional ten days. The defendant, however, did not make the promised $5,000 payment.

*334 The jury also found: (1) no breach by the plaintiff; (2) a breach by defendant; (3) no waiver by plaintiff of defendant’s breach, and (4) damages.

The plaintiff and the defendant differed sharply in their versions of the contract. The defendant testified to the effect that he promised to make the $5,000 payment only in the event he obtained the money from the sale or mortgage of certain houses owned by him, and not otherwise. The plaintiff, on his part, told the jury that the defendant’s promise was firm and absolute and the promised payment was in no way conditional upon the defendant’s ability to raise the money from particular sources.

If the promise was absolute, as asserted by the plaintiff, then there was a breach by the defendant in his failure to make the payment. On the other hand, if the condition stated by the defendant was not fulfilled, there was no breach by him. The credibility of the plaintiff and the defendant thus became of the utmost significance in the case. What in fact was the agreement turned in large measure upon the evidence of the plaintiff and defendant.

The error complained of arises from the refusal of the presiding justice to permit defendant’s counsel to read in argument certain testimony in the case.

The exception reads as follows:

“Exception 1
Certain testimony of the plaintiff in the previous case (a former trial of the same case) was read to the plaintiff on cross examination in this case and the plaintiff admitted it was his previous testimony. The previous testimony of plaintiff read into this case as it appears and became part of the record in this case is as follows:
Q There was a previous hearing, Mr. Young. In that hearing were you asked this question and *335 did you give this answer: ‘Q and there is no question but that everything was predicated on his selling that house in the first place’ ‘A. That is right.’ Now is that your testimony at the last hearing?
Mr. Alexander: Before the witness answers that question I would like to check and be sure it is identical with the transcript I have.
Mr. Oakes: The question is ‘And there is no question but that everything was predicated on his selling that house in the first place.’ ‘A. That is right.’
Mr. Alexander: Where is that testimony? (Conference between counsel)
Q (By Mr. Oakes) Now is that your testimony in the previous case? A. Yes.
Q Now Mr. Young, did this series of questions and answers occur at the last hearing: ‘Q (By Mr. Oakes) One more question, I think. When you first did business with Mr. Carignan, Sr. as you claim was it understood that the money was to come from the sale of the house?’ ‘A. From the sale of the new house or from the mortgage of the one he was living in that he just built.’ ‘Q. From the sale of the new house if it could be sold?’ ‘A. That is right.’ ‘Q. And otherwise from the mortgage of the house he was living in if he could raise it from that?’ ‘A. That is right.’ ‘Q. That is the condition upon which the plan was made up ?’ ‘A. That is what he told me.’ ‘Is that your testimony at the last hearing? A. It is.’
Robert Oakes arguing the case (for the defendant) led up to this testimony and started to read from the record of the previous case, the words as read into the record in this case as admitted by the plaintiff. The judge presiding refused to allow this testimony to be read. The transcript of the previous hearing was available to both counsel when originally introduced, at which time it was followed in the reading and was likewise available *336 when about to be read in argument. The record of the incident is as follows:
(Mr. Alexander then argued for the plaintiff and Mr. Robert Oakes for the Defendant. At the close of the defense argument and before rebuttal Mr. Raymond Oakes (also counsel for the defendant) conferred with the Court at the Bench in the presence of Mr. Alexander).
THE COURT: The defendant takes exceptions to the comment by the Court during argument of defense counsel wherein defense counsel had read and was again about to read from what appeared to be the transcript of the July, 1952 hearing, contending that the portion of the transcript which counsel had read and was about to read again had gone into the record in the instant case and was admitted by the witness of the plaintiff and hence was entirely proper. (Exception allowed)”

In his charge the presiding justice touched upon the problem in these words:

“Request No. 9 (by the defendant) reads as follows: ‘The ruling that attorney could not read from previous testimony does not prevent you from considering such of that testimony so introduced as any other testimony.’ I will give you that instruction. Some of the testimony from the previous case was read into the record of this case. That becomes evidence in this case just like the rest and must be considered by you. Any testimony that may have been read from the transcript of the previous case which was not entered on this record, that transcript not being an exhibit, is not properly before you, if there was any, and I do not say that happened, but any testimony from the previous case that was read into the record of this case becomes a part of this case and you must consider it.”

The issue is whether there was abuse of discretion by the presiding justice in prohibiting the reading of the testimony *337 in argument.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 A.2d 216, 152 Me. 332, 1957 Me. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-carignan-me-1957.