Court Opinion

ID: 3991425
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 10:51:14.642272+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:18:32.946854
License: Public Domain

Plaintiff sued to recover on two causes of action, separately stated: (1) To recover damages for refusal to deliver capital stock of defendant *Page 345 
corporation alleged to have been purchased from it; (2) on an open account in the sum of $3,225, on which it was alleged that $1,480.62 had been paid, leaving $1,736.38 still due. The defendant denied generally both causes of action, affirmatively alleged several counterclaims, and also pleaded payment in defense of the second cause of action. The affirmative matters in the answer were denied by the plaintiff. The trial resulted in three general verdicts, one for the plaintiff in the sum of $7,500 in the first cause of action, another for the plaintiff in the sum of $1,736.38 in the second cause of action, and another for the defendant in the sum of $520 in the second cause of action. Defendant moved for a new trial on all the statutory grounds and also because the verdicts in the second cause of action were inconsistent. The motion was granted as to the first cause of action and denied as to the other one. Judgment was entered for the plaintiff in the second cause of action in the sum of $1,216.38, the difference between the amount of the two verdicts. The defendant has appealed.
The denial of appellant's motion for a nonsuit in the second cause of action is assigned as error. We are satisfied from the record that there was sufficient evidence in support of the cause of action to take it to the jury.
[1] One of the items in respondent's account against the appellant originated in a wage account of a third person. Appellant contends that it was error to admit testimony concerning it in the controversy between these parties. It appears that, while the respondent was personally engaged in highway construction in which appellant was interested or involved, the respondent employed this third person to perform services in and about the construction camp, that were not paid for. Thereafter, in settlement between the respondent *Page 346 
and appellant embracing the obligations growing out of the construction operations conducted by the respondent, the appellant agreed with the respondent to pay all the indebtedness growing out of the operations, including the specific claim of this third person's wages. At least the respondent so testified, and besides, in protection of the appellant against any possible claim that this third person was employed by the appellant through the respondent as its agent, the respondent took an assignment of any claim the third person might have against the appellant. Under these circumstances the testimony objected to was properly admitted.
[2] One of the principal assignments of error is that the two verdicts in connection with the second cause of action are inconsistent and illogical. Each of them was a general verdict and complete within itself. Each in terms referred to the second cause of action. One of them was for the respondent and assessed his recovery in the sum of $1,736.38, the other one was for the appellant and assessed its recovery in the sum of $520. If the appellant owed the respondent more than the respondent owed it, appellant was not entitled to a verdict at all. In such case, respondent only was entitled to a verdict and in such sum as equaled the difference between the two amounts. Still further, if respondent owed the appellant more than it owed him, then respondent was not entitled to a verdict, but only the appellant and in such sum as equaled the difference between the two amounts. In either situation, the result should have been expressed in a single verdict. The same confusion arises if we view the verdicts in the light of the record behind them. In the court's instructions, nothing was said about appellant's counterclaims in connection with the first cause of action, but only in connection with the second cause of action. The jury *Page 347 
was instructed generally as to the second cause of action and specifically as to certain items contained within it and that,
". . . if there is a difference in favor of the plaintiff, you will find for the plaintiff in that amount."
Then, instructing the jury with reference to the contentions and evidence on behalf of the appellant, the jury was advised that, if under the evidence the claim in favor of the defendant exceeds the claim of plaintiff upon the second cause of action, "then you will find for the defendant in whatever that difference might be should you find such a fact". The evidence has been examined and re-examined, not only from the abstract and supplemental abstract, but also from the statement of facts, from which it appears there were extensive business dealings between these parties over a number of years involving large financial transactions. Settlements and adjustments upon terms defined were claimed and denied in the testimony. Payments alleged to have been made were testified to and denied or responsibility for them disputed. From a careful consideration of all the evidence, however, we are not able to say but that within its scope there is the possibility of credits in favor of the appellant in excess of the sum of the amounts expressed in the two verdicts, the proof in support of that view being in dispute. The result is that, whether the two verdicts are taken as they appear upon their faces or viewed in the light of the record from which they flow, they possess too much uncertainty to constitute a proper basis for a final judgment.
This conclusion makes it unnecessary to discuss other assignments of error.
Reversed, and remanded to the superior court with directions to set aside the two verdicts in the second *Page 348 
cause of action and grant appellant's motion for a new trial.
TOLMAN, MAIN, and FULLERTON, JJ., concur.