Judges: Beaver, Beeber, Orlady, Porter, Rice
Filed Date: 7/28/1899
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/13/2024
Opinion by
This was a feigned issue to try the title to certain personal property in which a plaintiff in an execution on a judgment
The defendant then proved that one E. A. Baker made a written contract with the plaintiff and with C. W. McKinney, signed by all three of them, to take the logs and saw them into lumber (and this was confirmed by the counsel who wrote the agreement), that for the balance due Baker on account of this contract the joint note of the two McKinneys was given, and that, according to the best recollection of Baker, the note was paid by their joint check. Defendant further proved that plaintiff told C. H. Kay that he and his brother, C. W. McKinney, were the owners of the timber cut from this tract, of which the lumber levied upon was a part, that C. A. Carlson made a contract with the plaintiff and C. W. McKinney to haul the logs from the tract, got part of his money from both of them and notes for the balance signed by both, that Thomas Halliday made a contract with C. W. McKinney to haul out the slab
In the face of all this evidence the court instructed the jury, in answer to the third point of the plaintiff and the fourth point of the defendant, that there was not sufficient evidence to be submitted to it to show that O. W. McKinney had any interest in the lumber levied upon. In this we think the court below was in error. The évidence, the substance of which we have stated above, was, in our opinion, amply sufficient to carry the case to the jury. If believed it would justify it in finding that some kind of an agreement, arrangement or contract was made between plaintiff and G. W. McKinney, by which the latter was to have an interest in the timber, or the lumber cut from it. Especially is this so in view of the fact that there was no contradiction whatever of any of this evidence by the plaintiff. All the testimony in the way of denial is found in the following quotations from the evidence. This is from the testimony of C. A. McKinney: “ Q. Do you remember when the contract was made for the cutting of the timber ? A. I do. Q. State to the court and the jury whether at the time the contract was made you owned any part of that timber. A. I did not. Q. Will you state if there was any conveyance from John Walter McKinney to yourself of any interest in the timber in question? A. There was not.” And this from the testimony of the plaintiff himself: “ Q. State whether or not there was any conveyance made by yourself to C. A. McKinney of any portion of this timber in question whatever. A. There was not, never.” All this may have been literally true, and yet it does not tend to rebut the inference which the jury might draw from the acts of the two McKinneys, that there was’ some contract between the two, by which G. W. McKinney was to have an interest in
Judgment reversed and venire facias de novo awarded.