Jensen v. Bumgarner

COWEN, District Judge.

This action was instituted by the respondent to recover from the appellants $30.90 upon a contract alleged to have been entered into by the respondent *707and the agents of the appellants for work and labor performed and material furnished in painting and tinting certain rooms in a building owned by the appellants, situated in the city of Nampa, Canyon county, and for the foreclosure of a mechanic’s lien. Judgment was awarded the respondent for the amount prayed for in respondent’s complaint, together with court costs and attorney’s fees, amounting in all to $133.50. This appeal is from the judgment.

This case is now before this court for the second time. The opinion in the former appeal will be found in 25 Ida. 355, 137 Pac. 529, in which will appear a somewhat more detailed statement of the proceedings. The first appeal was from the judgment and from an order denying defendants’ motion for a new trial. The case was reversed and remanded on the ground that the trial court had failed to make findings of fact and conclusions of law. Upon its return to the district court, the parties to the action entered into a stipulation, to the effect that the trial judge who heard the evidence in the original trial might consider the matter anew upon the transcript of the evidence which had been used on the first appeal. The judge thereupon made his findings and conclusions, and entered judgment for the plaintiff.

Some ten assignments of error are made upon the appeal, but they are all based upon the one contention, that the evidence was insufficient to support the findings and judgment. The court found, among other things, “That on or about the first day of April, 1912, the defendants authorized P. M. Bloom and TI. P. Ross, .... to contract for the repair of the said building, and that the said P. M. Bloom and H. P. Ross were the agents of the defendants and had charge of the repairs of said building.”

The whole controversy on this appeal centers around this one finding, and if there is any evidence in the record at all to support it, the judgment ought to be affirmed, as the rule— so firmly established by a long line of judicial opinions in this jurisdiction, as to require no citation of authorities to support it- — is to the effect that the appellate court will not disturb the judgment of a trial court, because of conflict in the evi*708denee, where there is sufficient proof, if uncontradieted, to sustain it.

While we still think, as held in the former opinion, that the proof is somewhat unsatisfactory to sustain the judgment, yet there is some evidence to base it on. Upon the disputed question Dr. Ross testified: ‘ ‘ They [the defendants] said they would go down and look for a man and send him up, and for me to show him what I wanted done. ’ ’ Dr. Bloom also testified: “They [the defendants] said they would send a man up and for Dr. Ross to show him wh.at to have done. ’ ’ And further: “They said they would go down and send a man up and for him [Dr. Ross] to have done whatever was necessary to have done.’’’

The specification of error on this point having been determined adversely to appellants’ contention, and the other specifications being based upon this one, they, also, -should be resolved against them.

The judgment of the lower court is affirmed, with costs to respondent.

Budge and Morgan, JJ., concur.