Court Opinion

ID: 3821532
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 07:56:14.648214+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:39:37.941942
License: Public Domain

Plaintiff presents and argues in its brief four propositions for reversal, but in the view taken of the case here they may all be considered under the second proposition, which reads:
"That the court erred in refusing to sustain plaintiff's motion for judgment non obstante and in refusing to render judgment for the plaintiff for the amount sued for."
To support the allegations of its petition plaintiff introduced in evidence the contract between the parties. This contract calls for a long list of supplies consisting of 19 separate and distinct items. The only testimony offered or introduced by the plaintiff for the purpose of sustaining its claim as to the amount due under the contract for the two years' service is the testimony of certain witnesses taken by deposition. None of these witnesses attempted to testify to the things furnished by plaintiff in compliance with said contract. Their testimony is limited to the general statement that the company complied fully with the terms of its contract. The contract having been introduced in evidence, it was a question of fact for the jury to determine whether its terms had been complied with and the jury could not determine this fact intelligently from mere statements of witnesses that the contract had been complied with, because this statement was merely a conclusion of the witness. For instance, the contract calls for 1,000 No. 1 letters and envelopes, 1,000 pass books, 200 extra pass books and jackets. No witness undertook to say that these specific items had been furnished. No witness attempted to say that any other specific item mentioned in the contract had been furnished. In other words, plaintiff asked the jury to accept the conclusions of its own witnesses as to what constituted a compliance with its contract. Neither the court nor the jury was bound to do this. Under the testimony contained in the record the verdict of the jury was the only verdict which could have been rendered based upon competent evidence of supplies furnished and accepted and used by the defendant, and for which a liability existed.
Complaint is made of certain instructions given by the court to the jury. These instructions are numbered 2, 4, and 5. An examination of these instructions discloses that the criticism of plaintiff directed against instruction No. 2 is well founded, but it is not apparent that instructions 4 and 5 are subject to the criticism directed against them. It is well settled by decisions of this court that where the verdict of a jury is the only verdict which could have been rendered under the evidence, and is the only verdict which the court would be justified in permitting to stand, an erroneous instruction, even though ordinarily prejudicial in character, will not work a reversal. Shawnee Nat. Bank v. Wootten  Potts, 24 Okla. 425,103 P. 714; Horton v. Early, 39 Okla. 99, 134 P. 436; Whitcomb v. Oller, 41 Okla. 331, 137 P. 709; Armstrong v. Poland, 56 Okla. 663, 156 P. 220; Liverpool  London  Globe Ins. Co. v. McLaughlin, 70 Okla. 237, 174 P. 248.
Complaint is also made of certain remarks of the trial judge made in the presence of the jury. Ordinarily this assignment would be sustained for the reason that said remarks were improper and should not have been indulged by the trial judge. But in view of the conclusion reached herein as to the correctness of the verdict returned by the jury under the evidence, it is not considered that such improper remarks constitute reversible error.
For the reason that the verdict and judgment are sustained by the evidence and because the verdict rendered was the only verdict which the evidence authorized, the judgment of the trial court should be affirmed.
By the Court: It is so ordered. *Page 55