DocketNumber: Nos. 16,895—(165)
Judges: Lewis
Filed Date: 12/23/1910
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/10/2024
Respondent was in the employ of appellant from August to November 15, 1902, as agent in charge of its elevator at Barry, Minnesota. It was his duty to buy grain from the farmers, store it in the elevator, and ship it out in car lots, according to the order of apr pellant- The action is to recover money paid on misrepresentation of appellant. Respondent was compelled to resign his position November 15 and go to North Dakota, for the purpose of living on the homestead upon which he had previously filed, and after reaching Dakota, a point over four hundred' miles from Minneapolis, he was
Tbe complaint charged that tbe scales upon which tbe grain was weighed when received in tbe elevator were imperfect, and for that reason there was an apparent shortage, when in fact there was none. Tbe jury returned a verdict of $650.04, tbe total amount of shortage claimed by appellant and paid by respondent, whereupon, on motion for a new trial by appellant, tbe court reduced tbe verdict, first, to tbe sum of $253.30, and later modified that order, and reduced it to $516.18, for which amount judgment was entered, and appeal was taken. • .
Tbe essential issues may be disposed of as follows: (1) What was tbe contract between tbe parties? (2) What, if any, shortage was established by tbe evidence? (3) Was there any evidence reasonably tending to support tbe claim that appellant induced respondent to make settlement and pay tbe amount of $650.04 by falsely representing to him that tbe grain shipped was short in that amount ? (4) Did tbe court err in granting a new trial, unless respondent would consent to a reduction of tbe verdict to $516.18 ?
It is claimed by appellant that tbe contract was that respondent should be charged with tbe net amount of tbe grain received at the terminal points, and not tbe gross weights; that respondent was responsible for tbe difference in dockage between tbe receiving and delivering points, and was to stand tbe loss.- Respondent claimed that be was employed as agent of appellant on a salary, and that bis
2. According to appellant’s letter of December 20, respondent was charged with a shortage of 669 bushels of wheat at 63 cents per bushel, and 258.4 bushels of flax at $1.02 per bushel, and given credit for 37 bushels and 12 pounds of barley at 39 cents per bushel, and 83 bushels and 28 pounds of oats at 24 cents per bushel, making a total of $650.04. At the trial the evidence showed that there was at least a total shortage of 478 bushels and 50 pounds of wheat, and an overage of barley of 135 bushels and 22 pounds, and of oats 72 bushels and 9 pounds, and, further, that there was an overage of flax of 247 bushels and 38 pounds, instead of being a shortage of 258 bushels, as claimed by appellant. There are some differences in the amount claimed by the parties as to overages on oats and barley, and the amount of shortage on wheat. The real controversy was with reference to the flax. According to the gross weights, there was an overage of at least 247 bushels and 38 pounds of flax, which entitled respondent to a credit of $252.44. Therefore, while there was a shortage in wheat, there was no shortage in the entire account.
3. The court properly instructed the jury that, if they should find that appellant made the claim of shortage in good faith, in an honest interpretation of the contract, there could be no fraud, and respondent could not recover. This leads to an examination of the evidence as to what were the facts necessarily within the knowledge of appellant at the time of making the demand for payment of the flax. It appears that respondent kept no books at the elevator, except a stub book, upon which was noted the amount of the grain
4. The court instructed the jury as follows: “Now, gentlemen of the jury, if you find as a matter of fact, under the evidence, that there was an actual shortage as claimed by the defendant, and that the plaintiff paid over the money for the purpose of settling that and paying it, and squaring the matter up and adjusting the claim then presented to him and made by the defendant, * * * plaintiff could not recover here; and in fact the plaintiff does not claim, and no claim could be made on behalf of the plaintiff, that if there was a legitimate and actual shortage, and he paid it, that he could recover back any part of it, either the $650.04, or any part of it.” Later on the court instructed as follows: “If the money was obtained by false and fraudulent representations made by the defendant to the plaintiff, and plaintiff relied upon them to his damage, the plaintiff is entitled in this action to recover back whatever money
If there was a dispute about the amount of shortage, and respondent paid the sum of $650.04 voluntarily, for the purpose of settling the dispute, he could not recover, although he may have paid for more than the actual shortage. But it does not necessarily follow that he cannot recover, simply because he was owing some part of the amount which he paid. If he was induced to part with $516.18 by reason of appellant’s false representations as to the flax, then he was not estopped from recovering that amount, simply because he voluntarily paid what was due for shortage on wheat. No exceptions were taken to the charge, and although in the first part quoted the court stated that respondent could not recover any part of the $650.-04, if there was any shortage, it was followed by the instruction that respondent could recover any part which he paid by reason of fraudulent representations. A finding by the jury that there was no shortage at all does not argue that they did not find that there was fraud as to the flax. Under the evidence and the instructions, the-jury might have returned a verdict for $516.18, and the result is the same as though the court had instructed the jury that respondent could not recover any of the amount paid for actual shortage. We discover no error in the reduction of the verdict, and are of opinion that the evidence sustains the verdict as reduced.
Affirmed.