Court Opinion

ID: 8183670
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 23:05:50.961147+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:40:20.168784
License: Public Domain

Cole, C. J.
The parties widely disagree in their testimony as to the agreement about the sale and purchase of the notes and drafts which are mentioned in the case. According to the plaintiff’s testimony, the defendant agreed to buy them and pay $120 for them, the payment to be made within thirty days. This the defendant positively denies, and says, in effect, that, when the plaintiff called upon him in Milwaukee in the spring of 1886, and handed him the papers, the plaintiff then said he paid $75 for them at the receiver’s sale, and that he replied to this statement that he would be in Green Bay in a week or so, and, if he became satisfied that the plaintiff had paid $75 for those papers, he would pay him that amount of money back and $10 for his trouble; that afterwards, when at Green Bay, he learned that the plaintiff had only paid seventy-five cents for the papers, and he saw the plaintiff, and told him he had lied about the matter when he said he had paid $75 for them; consequently he refused to pay that sum or to purchase them. Though the notes and drafts were utterly worthless, yet the defendant might wish, as he had been once liable upon them, to obtain possession of them, and they doubtless constituted a good consideration in law for an agreement to purchase them, and the trial court so held.
The court also submitted to the jury the question as to which account of the transaction was true, instructing, in substance, if the statement of the plaintiff as to the bargain was found to be correct, then he was entitled to recover $120 and interest from April 3, 1886, the time of the alleged purchase, but, if the defendant’s statement as to the bargain was true, there could be no recovery. The jury, in effect, found for the defendant, as we construe the verdict, and the inquiry now is as to the correctness of the charge upon the testimony. Upon that point it seems to us clear that the trial court was correct in its charge. The agree*386ment of the defendant was not an absolute one to purchase the papers and pay $75 for them, but was conditional, and was only to have effect if he found the plaintiff’s statement true that he had paid $75 for them. This was the condition annexed to the agreement to purchase, and it was a condition which the defendant had a right to impose. Now, the condition failing, the liability dependent upon it ceased to exist.
The learned counsel for the plaintiff insists that, in any event, the plaintiff was entitled to recover $10, which the defendant agreed to pay him for his trouble, and that it was error for the court to charge that the plaintiff must recover $120, or he was not entitled to recover anything. But we think the entire agreement was conditional or contingent upon the fact that the plaintiff’s statement was that he actually paid $75 for the papers. The payment of $10 for the plaintiff’s trouble was dependent upon that fact as much as the promise to buy the papers and pay $75 for them.
It appears from the testimony that the defendant, when at Green Bay, left with his brother $10 to pay the plaintiff for his trouble as promised, and the counsel says this was a practical construction by the defendant of the agreement that he was absolutely bound to pay that sum in any event. But this was a voluntary offer, not founded upon any promise to pay that sum, and, upon the facts, was not binding upon the defendant. His entire engagement was contingent upon the truth of the plaintiff’s statement that he paid $75 for the papers at the sale.
An objection is taken to the verdict which, it is said, is argumentative and void on its face. The verdict is in the following form: “ Tour honor, the jury find that there was no valued bargain betwixt Mr. Harran and Mr. Klaus, and have therefore come to the conclusion that Mr. Harran is not entitled to receive anything.” Of course this verdict is *387•very informal, and not expressed in accurate language, but there can be no doubt as to what the jury intended to find. It is, in substance and effect, a finding for the defendant upon the issue involved. The jury state the reason for that finding or conclusion, but this may be treated as immaterial. “ It has long been well settled that the courts will give validity to verdicts when they perceive the substance of the issue to be contained in the verdict, however rude or informal the finding of the jury may have been expressed.” 1 Grab. & W. New Trials, 160; Hayne, New Trials & App. 706. The verdict will support the judgment, and so much of it as is outside the issues may be disregarded. Snyder v. U. S. 112 U. S. 216. Our statute requires the court, in every stage of an action, to disregard any error or defect in the pleadings or proceedings which shall not affect the substantial rights of the adverse party, and no judgment shall be reversed or affected by reason of such error or defect. Sec. 2829, R. S. We cannot, therefore, reverse the judgment for the objection taken to the verdict.
It is further objected that it was error to admit in evidence the certificate of the discharge of the defendant in bankruptcy. We regard that item of testimony as entirely irrelevant, but its admission was harmless. We cannot perceive how it could have prejudiced the plaintiff’s case. He founded his right of action upon the agreement of the defendant to purchase the papers, long after the discharge in bankruptcy. The papers, as we have said, were worthless, and the discharge in bankruptcy did not affect their.value in any way whatever, nor was it at all material to inquire-whether the papers had any value or not. As a matter of honor, or as affecting his character as a business man, the defendant might naturally desire to obtain possession of the notes and drafts, and destroy them, though they were no longer binding obligations, and consequently they would constitute a sufficient consideration for an agreement to *388purchase them, had an absolute agreement to that effect been entered into. But there was no such an absolute agreement, as we must assume from the verdict of the jury.
By the Court.—We perceive no reversible error in the record, and the judgment of the circuit court is therefore affirmed.