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Mr. Justice Moore, after stating the facts, delivered the opinion of the court.
It is contended by plaintiff’s counsel that the jury, having required plaintiff to pay a certain sum of money and the defendant to return an indefinite quantity of goods, enjoined upon the parties mutual conditions which were impossible of enforcement in the action, thereby rendering their verdict void, and that the court, having rejected the finding as to the return of the goods, erred in rendering the judgment complained of. The only issue as to the sale of the goods relates to the cultivator, valued at $27.50, notwithstanding which the bill of exceptions discloses that testimony was introduced tending to show that defendant had in his possession, of the goods which he had so received, “plowshares, 3d attachment, of the value of $49.50,” which plaintiff also agreed to take back. If the jury intended that defendant, upon returning the cultivator and the plowshares, valued at $77, should be entitled to receive from plaintiff the sum of $52.50 on account of the damage he had sustained, then, by the court’s action in rejecting the special finding, he practically obtained a judgment for the sum of $129.50, but, if he were to keep these goods, judgment should have been rendered against him for the sum of $24.50 ; so that, in any event, the judgment is radically wrong. In Glass v. Blair, 4 Pa. St. 196, plaintiff having commenced an action in a justice’s court to recover on a promissory note, the defendant alleged that the consideration of the note was a worthless machine. On appeal the pleas were payment and set-off, and the jury, having found for the defendant, certified “a balance due to defendant, exclusive of the note not now offered against
*571 defendant, and plaintiff to receive back the machine.” Judgment having been rendered on the verdict, Mr. Justice Rogers, speaking for the court in reversing it, says : “It is an insurmountable objection to the verdict that there is no means of compelling its performance; for, if the defendant refuses to deliver the machine, -which is an essential part of the verdict, there is no means to compel him, as an attachment — the only known process— will not lie. His only remedy would be by suit, on the ground of a rescission of the contract; and thus the verdict, which is intended to end the controversy, would be but the commencement or foundation of another action : Pennington v. Bowman, 10 Watts, 285. But it is said the exceptionable part may be rejected as surplusage; but that this cannot be done is ruled in Shoemaker v. Meyer, 4 Serg. & R. 455, as this would be taking an unwarrantable liberty with the finding of the jury, and would subvert their whole intention. It would be an act of injustice to the plaintiff, as we cannot avoid seeing that the verdict is rendered in this form only on 'the condition that the machine is returned to the seller.”In Brack v. Mausbury, 102 Pa. St. 35, an action was instituted to recover the price agreed to be paid for constructing a sawmill. The defense was that the mill had not been constructed in conformity with the contract, and, a trial being had, the jury found for plaintiff in tire sum of $246.66, adding to the verdict the following clause : “And the plaintiff to complete the job according to contract.” Upon this verdict, judgment was rendered, in reversing which the court say: “The jury evidently considered it a matter of substance, — something to be done by the plaintiff in fulfillment of his contract, and as part consideration, at least, of the sum found in his favor. The only inference that can be fairly drawn from the language of the jury is that they were satisfied plain
*572 tiff had not fulfilled his contract, and that he was still hound to complete it. Hence it could not be treated as surplusage without disregarding the intention of the jury, and thereby doing injustice to the defendant.” In McFall v. Smith, 32 Ill. App. 463, it is held that, where questions not properly arising upon the evidence are so mingled before the jury with the real issue in the case as to render it doubtful upon what ground the verdict is based, it should be set aside.It is maintained by defendant’s counsel that plaintiff could have moved to have the jury sent out to correct their findings, but, not having availed itself of that opportunity, it is too late to complain of the action of the court, after the verdict has been recorded and the jury discharged. However this may be, the transcript fails to show that plaintiff’s counsel was present on that occasion, and no presumption can be indulged in that respect. But, if it appeared that he was in attendance upon the court at that time, the duty of correcting the verdict did not devolve upon him; for, the findings of the jury being against his client’s interests, he was not obliged to see that the verdict was sufficient to support a judgment.
The verdict in the case at bar, having required the performance of mutual acts on the part of plaintiff and defendant, which could not be enforced in the action, is void: 28 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (1 ed.), 265. It is impossible to treat the finding of the jury in respect to the return of the goods as surplusage, and reach the conclusion which their verdict imparts ; and, the court having erred in receiving the verdict, the judgment predicated thereon is reversed, and a new trial ordered.
Reversed.
Document Info
Citation Numbers: 35 Or. 568, 57 P. 625, 1899 Ore. LEXIS 247
Judges: Moore
Filed Date: 6/26/1899
Precedential Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024