Court Opinion

ID: 6587387
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 19:50:07.764022+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:57:31.975100
License: Public Domain

CoNAway, Justice.
On September 12, 1892, by written contract between tbe parties, defendant in error sold to plaintiff in error “six thousand eight hundred (6,800) head of one and two year old wethers, all branded with an ‘S’ brand, and a part of them branded with an ‘M’ brand, being the one and two year old wethers purchased by the said party of the first part from Seldom, Eidge & Pebbles and Y. S. Acord.” It appears that instead of Seldom, Eidge & Pebbles there should have been written Seldomridge & Pebbles, a clerical error in reducing the contract to writing. These sheep were to be delivered by defendant in error to plaintiff in error at Eoek Springs, Sweetwater County, Wyoming, on June first, 1893, or at any time in May of that year, upon reasonable notice by plaintiff in error.
Defendant in error contracted to “handle, run, herd and care.for” the sheep, at his own expense, but as agent or bailee for plaintiff in error, and to give them all proper care and attention until such delivery, and to run them in bands of not more than twenty-seven hundred each, and to make good any loss that might occur, by other wethers of the same age and grade, and deliver not less than six thousand eight hundred head, and to deliver them in a good and clean condition, but if they should be. found to be scabby, to pay for dipping them; and if they should become scabby during the winter of 1892-93, to dip them as soon as the weather would permit.
The consideration paid and to be paid-by plaintiff in error was twenty-two thousand nine hundred and fifty dollars. Seventeen thousand was paid at the execution of the contract, and five thousand nine hundred and fifty dollars was to be paid on the delivery of the sheep. On May 22, 1893, a delivery of the requisite number of sheep was made upon the written request of plaintiff in error.
The plaintiff in error alleges certain violations of the contract by defendant in error, and certain fraudulent repre*157sentations by which plaintiff in error was indneed to enter into sneh contract, on account of which plaintiff in error refused and still refuses to make the final payment of five thousand nine hundred and fifty dollars.
To recover this sum, with interest from June first, 1893, defendant in error brought this action in the District Court of the Second Judicial District for Albany County, setting forth •the contract and alleging compliance, on his part, with its terms.
Plaintiff in error admits the making of the contract, and by way of defense and counter claim alleges that he had no opportunity to examine the sheep when he made the purchase, but relied upon false and fraudulent representations of defendant in error that the sheep were of a grade and quality better than they, in fact, were, to the damage of plaintiff in error, in the sum of twelve thousand seven hundred and fifty dollars; and that defendant in error negligently handled and cared for the sheep and allowed them to become diseased and scabby, to the damage of plaintiff in error in the sum of si-x thousand dollars; and that plaintiff in error was compelled to pay for dipping the sheep the sum of two hundred and thirty-eight dollars. Plaintiff in error prays judgment for eighteen thousand nine hundred and eighty dollars.
There was a trial by jury and a verdict and judgment in favor of defendant in error for four thousand eight hundred and twenty dollars and seventy-five cents.
Plaintiff in error claims that the verdict and judgment is “against the weight of evidence and contrary to the evidence on the question of the assessment of damages awarded to de- . fendant in error.” As to this, it is only necessary to say, that ■the evidence was conflicting. It was the proper province of the jury to consider the evidence and to determine the question of damages. It is well settled that an appellate court will not interfere in such cases, unless there is an utter lack of evidence to sustain the verdict, or at least a very great preponderance of evidence against it. We cannot say that this is such a case.
*158Error is assigned in the giving and refusing of a number of instructions to. the jury over the objection of plaintiff in error.'. It appears that the law of-the case was fairly stated in the instructions given. That it was not repeated in instructions, asked for is not prejudicial error.'
It is assigned as error that the court refused to allow plaintiff in error the opening and closing argument to the jurjr. Defendant'in error'(plaintiff below) first presented his evidence in ehief to the jury, and after the evidence of plaintiff' in error was produced, introduced further'evidence in rebuttal, without objection on the part of plaintiff in error. Some things alleged in the statement of the cause of action in the petition of defendant'in error were denied in.the answer of plaintiff in error. It was not purely and simply a plea in ■ confession and avoidance, but was something' more. It was necessary for the defendant in error, in order to establish his cause of action in full to show.by evidence, a-performance on. his part.of .the conditions'of his contract by him to be performed, which' performance was alleged' by him and denied by plaintiff in error.- This he was allowed to• do,'without objection, by first'introducing his evidence. Under these-circumstances he was entitled1 to the opening and closing argument. ■
The damages were not liquidated. 1 Thompson on Trialsj • Secs. 229, 232, and 233.-
The admission of the testimony of Joseph Young is assigned as error. This testimony tended to ■ show the value of sheep at Eock Springs, and as bearing upon that point, their value at Colorado'. Springs,' and the expense of shipping from -that point to Eock Springs. Mr. "Young was intro- " dücéd as an expert, acquainted with the price of such- sheep as those delivered at Eock Springs. It would be a "very strict' rule to hold it prejudicial error that he testified that he was acquainted’with these particulars' tending to show his' thorough acquaintance with the- subject.
It is assigned as a cause for reversing the' judgment, that the bailiff, when he asked the jury if they had agreed upon' a verdict, was asked by one of the jurymen when the judge *159would call them into court, and replied,.“I suppose some time next week.” In support of his contention on this point, plaintiff in error cites Obear v. Gray, 68 Ga., 182; Grolston v. Grolston, 31 Ga., 625; Cole v. Swan, 4 G. Greene (Iowa), 32; People v. Knapp, 42 Mich., 257. An examination of these cases shows that in each case the irregularity in the conduct of the officer was much more serious and more adapted to influence wavering jurymen than was the conduct of the bailiff in this case at bar. The eases cited on behalf of defendant in error show that irregular conduct of officers more serious than this has not been considered cause for reversal. See The State v. Swart, 51 Iowa, 587; Daniel v. Frost, 62 Ga., 697; Price v. Lambert, 3 N. J. Law, 122 (star page 401); Wiggins v. Downer, 67 How. Pr., 65; Taylor v. Everett, 2 How. Pr., 23; Pope v. State, 26 Miss., 121; Leech v. Wilber, 9 Allen (Mass.), 212; Darling v. Railroad Co., 17 R. I., 708.
We find no prejudicial error in this record. The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Gboesbeck, C. J., and CobN, J., concur.