Action in claim and delivery to recover possession of a team of horses of the alleged value of $200. Verdict and judgment for plaintiff. Defendants appeal from the judgment and an order overruling motion for a new trial.
A brief statement of the' pleadings and of the evidence offered at the trial is necessary to an understanding- of the errors assigned and discussed in appellants’ brief. The complaint is in the ordinary form in claim and delivery. ' The answer denies that the plaintiff is the owner of or entitled to the possession of the property, and the wrongful detention thereof. The answer further alleges that about August 25, 1910, plaintiff and one J. E. Rowe purchased of Nichols & Shepard Company, by written contract, a Hart-Par.r traction engine, secondhand, and a ten-bottom Deere engine gang plow; that said purchasers were the owners at the time of the team of horses described in the complaint' and contract, and agreed to turn in said team as a part payment of the purchase price of the outfit, and that this was the only part of the purchase price to be paid at the time of the delivery of the rig to Harris and Rowe; that said rig was delivered to plaintiff and Rowe under said contract; that immediately after the execution of *281said contract the same was assigned and transferred by Nichols & Shepard Company to the defendants, Lyons Bros., who ever since have been and now are the owners thereof; that after Harris and Rowe 'had secured possession of the rig they refused to deliver possession of the horses; that thereupon Lyons Bros., on the 12th day of September, 1910, began an action against Harris and Rowe to recover possession of said horses; that Harris and Rowe appeared in the action on the 13th day of September, 19x0, and, pursuant to written stipulation then made, the controversy was settled, and the 'horses in dispute were turned over to Lyons Bros., and the action dismissed'; and that defendants thus came into, and ever since have been, in lawful possession of said horses.
To this answer plaintiff served and filed a reply, admitting the purchase of the rig, but alleging that the signatures to the written agreement of sale made at the time were obtained by false and fraudulent representation as to the ownership of the property and the contents of the instrument; and further alleging that at the time of said sale it was represented that all of said machinery was in good first-class working condition and would do good work; and it was agreed that when said machinery was shown- to be in a good, satisfactory condition and able to do the work for which it was intended, and plaintiff had learned to operate the same, settlement should be made and the horses delivered; that said conditions and agréments were fraudulently omitted from the written agreement of purchase and sale; that said rig was delivered to the plaintiff who attempted to operate said engine and plows with the assistance of divers persons skilled in running such machinery, but that same could not be operated and refused to plow; that plaintiff notified defendants that he would not accept the same or make settlement therefor; that thereupon defendants brought action of claim and delivery for the recovery of possession of said horses; that while said action was pending defendants represented to plaintiff that said engine was then in good working condition and would do good work, and if plaintiff would then give said engine a second trial, in case the same did not prove satisfactory, the defendants would take the same back; that defendants would discharge the action in court and furnish a competent person to operate said engine, and that the horses should remain in possession of defendants until said, engine was given such trial; that, *282pursuant to said agreement, an instrument was drawn up in writing and signed by plaintiff and defendants, and the pending action dismissed by stipulation. The written instrument referred to is in the following language:
“Exhibit A.
“Whereas Lyons Bros., of Redfield, S. D., parties of the first part, did, on Aug. 25, 1910, sell and deliver to Frank Harris and J. E. Rowe, parties of the second part, one io-bottom Deere stubble gang plow and one second-hand 22-45 H. P. gas engine of Hart-Parr make, together with such equipment as is mentioned in the written contract made between the parties hereto on said date; and whereas,-the plows are satisfactory to the second parties, but, they have not had sufficient opportunity to test said engine and ascertain if it is according to contract: Wherefore it is agreed that second parties may have three days to test said engine, as follows: That said engine will pull continuously in a good and workmanlike manner said gang plows when plowing with eight bottoms at a depth of from four to six inches deep; that if after using said engine for a period of three days it should prove unable to do said work as aforesaid, first parties agree to take the same back and surrender the span of horses this day delivered to them by second parties. If said engine does said -work as aforesaid, then second parties agree to sign the notes described in the contract of Aug. 25th, and fully perform all the- terms therein contained. It is also agreed that said test of said engine shall be made as soon as first parties furnish a competent engineer to run said engine for said test; that said engineer shall be paid by first parties, but second parties shall board him and shall pay for all gas and oil used in making said test. If said contract is closed as aforesaid, first parties agree to furnish an engineer for an additional three days to run said engine for second parties free of charge, except second parties shall board him. This contract shall not supersede the contract made on Aug. 25, 1910, but shall be considered as supplementary thereto, and shall not become binding until all of the parties above named have signed the same. Re-plevin action between these parties to be dismissed at cost of first parties. Dated Sept. 14th, 1910. Lyons Bros., by B. E. Lyons. Frank Harris.”
The reply further alleges that after this written agreement was *283entered into defendants furnished divers persons skilled in the operation of traction engines and plows, who attempted to operate said machinery, but that the same refused to work, and such persons were compelled to abandon attempts to operate the same; that after said machinery was thus fully tried and found unfit for' work plaintiff notified defendants that he would not accept same, and demanded the return of the horses, which demand was refused.
At the trial -plaintiff was sworn as a witness in his own behalf, and, in substance, testified that on the 25th of August, 1910, he was the owner of the team df 'horses in controversy; that he had a conversation about that time with the defendants in regard to buying the g'asoline engine and plowing outfit; that on or about the 14th of September, 1910, he had another conversation with Carney Lyons concerning the horses, which conversation took place at his counsel’s office; that he then ' signed the agreement with Lyons Bros., marked “Exhibit A,” and that Barney Lyons signed the same, on behalf of the firm of Lyons Bros., at the same time. Exhibit B was then shown to the witness, who "testified that it was the paper referred to in Exhibit A; that the first time he saw Exhibit A thereafter was on August 25th at Lyons Bros.’ office. Exhibits A and B were offered and received in evidence over defendants’ objection. Plaintiff was thereupon interrogated by his counsel at great length, and, over numerous objections and exceptions, was permitted to testify concerning attempts made after September 14, 1910, by himself and the defendants and certain experts to make the machinery do satisfactory work, which attempts, he testified, were failures. The witness was further permitted to testify, over proper objections, that at the time of the original agreement for purchase of the property Lyons Bros, inquired of Harris what security he wanted to give, and that “Mr. Rowe volunteered and spoke up and said, rI will go. on the note with him;’ ” that Mr. Rowe’s statement was made in response to the inquiry of Barney Lyons about security. The written instrument, Exhibit B, signed by Harris and Rowe and Lyons Bros., referred to in Exhibit A, is set out in the record on this appeal as follows: “Exhibit B is an order, signed by Frank Harris and J. E. Rowe, running to Nichols & Shepard Co. for a traction engine, a set of plows, and other property, which they agree shall be secondhand machinery, and for whiih they agree to pay as fol*284lows: One bay span of geldings; one note for $700, due Nov. 1, 1911; one note for $700, due Nov. 1, 1912; one note for $600, due Nov. 1, 1913. With interest on notes at 6 per cent, per annum. Contract is dated August 25, 1910” — and not otherwise.
In the assignments of error in the record, appellants specify 11 particulars in which the evidence is alleged to be insufficient to sustain the verdiit, 100 assignments of error in rulings on evidence, and 21 assignments of error in refusing instructions requested by defendants’ counsel and errors in instructions given the jury, and in refusing to set aside'the verdict and grant a new trial.
[1] It is manifestly impossible to consider these assignments of error seriatim. The case was tried upon the issues raised by the complaint, answer, and reply. At the trial plaintiff apparently deemed it incumbent upon him to present the entire transaction covered by the allegations contained in the complaint, answer, and reply. And many of the rulings upon the introduction of evidence complained of and assigned as error are upon objections founded upon the theory that under the complaint the plaintiff should not be permitted to prove the entire transaction, but should have been confined to the allegations of the complaint in claim and delivery. It is plainly aparent that the plaintiff was not required and should not have been permitted in his main case to present proof of the entire transaction between the parties. He should have proved his ownership of the horses, demand for possession of the sanye, and the refusal of the defendants to surrender possession, and rested his case. Defendants then could have introduced evidence of the transaction pleaded in the answer, and plaintiff, without any reply, would have been at liberty to prove all the facts alleged in his reply connected with the transaction set out in the answer. This would have been the appropriate procedure. But, had this procedure been followed, the evidence before the court and jury could not have been other or different from that offered and received on the trial, and contained in the record; and we are wholly unable to perceive in what way appellants could be or have been injured or prejudiced by the irregular course actually pursued, and, unless injury or prejudice to defendants’ rights have in some way resulted, this court would not be justified in granting a new trial. Apparently appellants’ counsel treated the reply as proper pleading in the case. No motion *285was made to strike it out. The reply itself merely advised defendants of facts b)>' means of. which the plaintiff might seek to avoid the matters of defense pleaded in the answer.
It seems to -us, therefore, that when the plaintiff assumed the burden of proving the entire transaction in the first instance it was distinctly to the advantage of defendants, rather than to their injury. No further attention will therefore be paid to the numerous assignments of error upon rulings on the introduction of evidence, in which the objections are predicated upon this alleged irregularitjr in procedure. At the trial no attention was paid by either party to the terms and conditions of the memorandum of agreement, Exhibit' B, originally entered into between Hjárris and Rowe and Nicholas & Shepard Company, ’which was assigned to the defendants, Lyons Bros. No attempt appears to have been made by the plaintiff to pro,ve that this agreement was procured by fraud or artifice, as alleged in the reply. The entire case seems to have been upon the theory that the rights of both parties were wholly fixed and determined by the stipulations and agreements' contained in Exhibit A, the supplemental contract.-
It is appellants’ contention, however, that the supplemental contract was never in force, inasmuch as it was never signed by J. E. Rowe, one of the parties named therein, because it contains an express stipulation that it “shall not become binding, unless all of the parties above named have signed the same.” Át the trial plaintiff sought to show that after the execution of the contract, Exhibit A, by Lyons Bros, and Harris the signature' of Rowe thereto was waived, and that defendants are not now in a position to insist upon the invalidity of the contract for that reason. Plaintiff while upon the witness stand, was asked the following-question : “I will ask you whether or not you had a conversation with Barney Lyons in my office on September 14,-1910, after you ■had signed Exhibit A, in reference to Mr. Rowe’s signing the same? (Objected to as incompetent, inadmissible under the pleadings, tending to vary the terms of the written instrument, no proper foundation laid. Overruled. Exception.) Answer: He said they were binding on himself and me, but not on Mr. Rowe; but he said: “That don’t make any difference whether Rowe signs it or not. If that engine don’t go out and give thorough satisfaction, I will pull it in, and he can ’have his horses. I don’t want Mr.. *286Rowe to have something that he can’t use. It is worth the money.’ (Motion to strike out'the answer denied. Exception.)”
Plaintiff also, over proper objections and exceptions, was permitted to introduce certain evidence tending to show that Rowe had no interest in the transaction, other than as a surety on the original contract, Exhibit B. It is quite clear that, unless this evidence was properly received and was sufficient to constitute a waiver of the condition in the contract, Exhibit A, requiring the signature of all the parties named therein, before the same became binding, the contract was ineffective, and could not have been properly received in evidence for any purpose.
[2] The first question presented is whether the contract was properly received in evidence over defendants’ objection that it was incompetent under the allegations of the pleading. The contract, Exhibit A, was fully set out in plaintiff’s reply. The condition requiring the same to be signed by all the parties named therein, before the same should become binding, was disclosed by the pleading itself. The plain object of this reply was to defeat the matters pleaded in the answer. The original contract, as set out in the record, contained no condition or provision under which the plaintiff would be entitled to a return of the horses. It contained neither warranty nor any condition entitling the plaintiff to a trial of the plowing rig, and a return, should it prove unsatisfactory. It is cleat, therefore, that plaintiff’s entire right to a return of the horses depended upon the terms and stipulations contained in this contract, Exhibit A. Upon its face, in the absence of further allegations, this contract was not binding upon the parties named therein, because the contract itself disclosed that it was not signed by Rowe. Barber v. Burrows et al., 51 Cal. 404; Waggeman v. Bracken, 52 Ill. 468.
[3, 4] If this contract ever became binding upon the defendants, it was because of statements and acts of such character as to constitute a waiver of this condition in the contract operating as an estoppel to assert its invalidity. It will be observed that the plaintiff’s reply, although it sets out the .contract in full fails to allege any of the facts which might be claimed to constitute such an estoppel. The only objection pertinent ’to the pleading which was made to the evidence offered and received to prove these facts is that the same was inadmissible under the pleading’s. Such an ob*287jection does not disclose the grounds of the objection, which, if properly stated, would have been that such evidence was inadmis sible, because no estoppel had been pleaded. The objection in the ■record, therefore, under the well-settled rule of this court, presents no question for review, and the evidence must be considered as having been properly received. Had the grounds of the obj ection been properly stated, thus advising plaintiff, he might, if necessary, have amended his reply by pleading an estoppel in connection with the contract itself. We must presume in support of the judgment that the jury found the facts thus testified to as claimed by plaintiff.
[5] The question then presented is whether defendants should to held estopped by their statements and acts, in connection with the stipulations in the contract, from asserting its invalidity. The statements of. the defendant Barney Lyons were to the effect that it did not make any difference whether Rowe signed the contract or not; that it was binding on himself and plaintiff in any event; and, acting apparently on these statements, plaintiff and defendants then proceeded to carry out the stipulations of the contract as to a trial of the engine and plows — the defendants furnishing an engineer to run the engine for the test, and continuing to run the same during- the three days specified in the contract. It also appears that Barney Lyons said they relied upon the liability of Rowe upon the original contract, and not upon the supplemental contract.
Upon these facts we are clearly of opinion the defendants should now be held to have waived the signature of Rowe to the latter contract, and should be held estopped to assert its invalidity upon this appeal.
Appellants, in their brief, discuss at some length the right of rescission upon a breach of warranty, and the necessity of a return or offer of return of the property warranted. No question of a breach of warranty or of rescission is presented by the record upon this appeal.
[6] Under the specifications of insufficiency of evidence to sustain tíre verdict, appellants’ counsel say the record shows the plows worked satisfactorily to the plaintiff, and that the engine worked continuously in a good and workmanlike manner, pulling eight plows at a depth of from five to six inches; that plaintiff *288never attempted to give the engine a fair trial, but was endeavoring to find some way to escape from his obligations under the contract. The evidence relating to all these matters was conflicting, and was for the jury, and, we think, was fairly and fully submitted by the instructions given them. They were instructed that “the trial of the engine mentioned in Exhibit A should be a fair and .bona fide trial on the part of both Mr. Harris and Lyons Bros., and in the manner provided in Exhibit A; and it is for you to determine from all of the evidence whether this engine, after a fair trial, did or did not meet with the requirements of Exhibit A (and by Exhibit A, whenever referred to, is meant the white paper, dated September 14, 1910, signed by Lyons Bros., by B. F. Lyons, and Frank Harris). If the engine, after a fair trial, did meet the requirements of Exhibit A, then plaintiff cannot recover.” The court also instructed the jury: “According to the terms of Exhibit A, it was not to become operative until all the parties thereto had signed same, and you are instructed that this provision is binding on all parties; but you are further instructed that this provision could, after the instrument was signed by Lyons Bros, and Harris, be modified, and the signature of Mr. J. E. Rowe could be waived; and if the parties who did sign Exhibit A afterwards changed same, or waived the signature of Rowe and went on and acted under the provisions of Exhibit A just as if Rowe had signed it, and knowing that he had not signed it, then the provisions of Exhibit A are binding- on the parties who did sign it. * * * ”
This instruction states the law correctly, as we view it, and under it the questions of fact were 'determined by the jury in favor of respondent. We cannot disturb the verdict. Defendants requested the court to instruct the jury “that if Exhibit A became operaive, and the engine did not fulfill its requirements, that plaintiff had no right to return or offer to return both plows and engine and demand his horses, because he had already accepted the plows and found them satisfactory.” Such an instruction would not be warranted by anything contained in the record, and was properly refused. It was clearly the intention of the parties to the contract that the engine and plows were to be used together, and not otherwise. 35 Cyc. 115 (b), and cases cited.
[7] The witness Rowe, party to the contract, was permit*289ted to testify, over appellants’ objections, that it was stated at the time the rig was purchased through Lyons Bros, that Harris was the purchaser, and that the witness did not receive any consideration for signing the contract. Whether Rowe received any consideration was wholly immaterial to any issue in the case, and the objection should 'have been sustained; but Rowe is not a party to this action, and the question of his liability could in no way affect the defendants, except in so far as it might throw light on their intent to waive the condition in the contract requiring the signatures of all parties thereto. The evidence was not prejudicial to appellants, even if improperly. received. We have considered all the assignments of error, and have carefully examined the whole evidence; and, even though the verdict of the jury might be different from that which the court would have found, yet the facts are for the jury to decide, and we find in the record sufficient evidence to sustain the finding, if believed by them to be true.
We find no reversible error in the record. The judgment and order of the trial court are therefore affirmed.