Casner v. Hoskins

Mr. Justice Moore

delivered the opinion of the court.

The bill of exceptions does not purport to contain or have attached thereto a transcript of the entire testimony given at the trial. The court certifies, however, that the bill contains all the evidence necessary to explain the objections interposed, the rulings thereon, and the exceptions taken, together with the entire charge to the jury and the instructions requested. It appears that on November 21, 1904, a written contract was entered into with the United States Oil & Mining Company, a corporation, of which plaintiff was the general manager, whereby the defendant stipulated, inter alia, to test with a drill the corporations coal lands at Catoosa, Indian Territory, in order to ascertain the depth of the vein, and, if merchantable coal were found in paying quantities, he would strip 200,000 cubic yards of earth from the surface of the bed, leaving the coal clean and ready to be loaded upon cars for transportation, for which service he was to be paid monthly at 14 cents per cubic yard for the material removed. The defendant further stipulated to build and maintain from Catoosa a narrow gauge railroad and to operate thereon engines, cars, and other equipment necessary to haul coal from the mines to that city, for which service he was to have been paid monthly at the rate of 25 cents per ton for coal and 15 cents per ton for slack. It was also provided that each party would execute to the other a good and sufficient bond in the sum of $25,000 for the faithful performance of his or its part of the agreement. No undertaking, however, was given by either party. The plaintiff maintained at the trial that though the stipulation reciprocally to execute the bonds mentioned was mutually waived by the parties, all the *264services performed by the defendant, and for the value of which he sought to recover, were rendered to the United States Oil & Mining Company pursuant to the terms of their written contract. This statement was denied by the defendant, who contended that the written contract was abandoned and that all the labor performed and property furnished were done’ and supplied for the plaintiff in accordance with the terms of a subsequent oral agreement.

The defendant as a witness in his own behalf, having testified in support of the averments of his first counterclaim, was interrogated in respect to the allegations of his second separate defense as follows:

“Now in addition to the narrow gauge road that you have testified about, did you build any other railroad or do any other railroad work?”

1. The plaintiff’s counsel objected to the inquiry and also to the admission of any testimony to substantiate the various counterclaims on the ground that the several averments in the separate defenses, to wit, “No part of which has ever been paid except as hereinafter alleged,” were insufficient to authorize a recovery. The statute regulating the sufficiency of an answer, after declaring the necessity of controverting each material allegation of a complaint, contains clauses authorizing the averments of facts in avoidance of plaintiff’s cause of action as follows:-

“A statement of any new matter constituting a defense or counterclaim, in ordinary and concise language, without repetition.” Section 73, L. O. L.

“The defendant may set forth by answer as many defenses and counterclaims as he may have. They shall each be separately stated, and refer tó the cause of action which they are intended to answer, in such manner that they may be intelligibly distinguished.” Section 74, L. 0. L.

The general rule is that a separate defense should be complete within itself and contain all the averments *265necessary to answer the entire cause of action set forth in the complaint or such part thereof as is intended to be controverted. Gardner v. McWilliams, 42 Or. 14 (69 Pac. 915); Moore v. Holliday, 43 Or. 243 (72 Pac. 801: 99 Am. St. Rep. 724). In the construction of pleadings as in the interpreting of other writings, the maxim, “That is certain which can be rendered certain,” applies, and where one part of an answer, for the purpose of avoiding reiteration of facts alike applicable to the other parts of the defense, refers to such part where the matter to which attention is thus attracted is sufficiently set forth, the allusion is a compliance with the requirements of the statute that the language employed in an answer shall be concise and without repetition. 1 Enc. PI. & Pr. 853; Sutherland v. Phelps, 22 Ill. 91.

The several defenses herein admit the payments which it is averred the plaintiff made on account thereof, and also set forth in some instances the remainders which the sums asserted to be due on other counterclaims make an aggregate, appearing in the tenth paragraph of the answer to which each separate defense particularly refers. The averments of the answer were sufficient to permit the testimony so objected to to be admitted. We have not overlooked the case of Davenport v. Dose, 40 Or. 336 (67 Pac. 112), in which'the answer, after denying the material allegations of the complaint, “except as hereinafter stated,” set up a counterclaim as a separate defense. An application for nonsuit for insufficiency of evidence having been allowed, it was held that the motion was not an admission that the counterclaim alleged was without merit. No question was suggested in that case as to any insufficiency of the answer in the respect insisted upon in the case at bar.

2. The defendant having testified in conformity with the allegations of his eighth counterclaim, and particularly in reference to the sum of $9,000 agreed to have *266been paid for a part of the property which was put into a fund by the persons who, by subscription therefor, became members of the corporate body, was asked, “Did you ever receive any stock?” and he replied, “I never saw it.” The plaintiff’s counsel thereupon moved to strike out the answer on the ground that the promissory notes sued upon, and the sum so agreed to be paid for the stock, having been renewed April 29, 1905, the amount then ascertained to be due could not be controverted by the defendant.

The giving of a promissory note raises a disputable presumption that all antecedent demands between the parties, not embraced in any writing, were included in the settlement which was consummated by the execution of the note. Williams v. Culver, 30 Or. 375 (48 .Pac. 365). This principle is usually invoked as evidence by the maker of a promissory note at a trial when sued by the original payee on an account existing between them before the note was executed. The presumption referred to has no application to a promissory note, any part of which is illegal or without consideration. Thus if the giving of a note was induced by fraud, or there was a failure or want of consideration, all subsequent renewals of the written promise to pay at a stated time a specified sum of money are open to the same defense. Adams v. Ashman, 203 Pa. 536 (53 Atl. 375). A contrary rule would impose excessive burdens on the maker of a promissory note which had been renewed in compliance with the importunities and threats of an exacting payee. The answer of the witness was properly allowed to remain in evidence.

3. The deposition of E. G. Wilson having been offered in evidence, the defendant’s counsel objected to an inquiry in the sworn statement which referred to the written agreement, to wit, “Did the defendant comply with all the terms and conditions of said contract?” *267A motion was also made to strike out the answer to the question on the ground that it was not responsive to any controversy involved in the pleadings. The objection was sustained and the motion allowed, and it is maintained that errors were thereby committed. It will be remembered that this action is for the recovery of money alleged to be due on promissory notes. The complaint is in the usual form of actions of that kind. The making of a verbal agreement whereby .the defendant asserts that he constructed the railroad and performed other services is set forth in the answer. The new matter thus averred is denied by the plaintiff whose reply contains statements of other facts as hereinbefore in substance detailed. No reference is made in the pleadings of either party to the written contract. The rule is universal that the evidence received at the trial of a cause must correspond with the issues made by the pleadings. Some testimony relating to the written agreement was received without complaint, but, when objection was made to the want of an issu'e in this respect, the court properly excluded the answer to the inquiry.

4. The plaintiff having testified that the narrow gauge railroad was built by the defendant for his own use, pursuant to the terms of the written agreement, that none of the services or demands set forth in the several counterclaims was performed for or incurred by the witness, and that he never promised or agreed to pay any sum therefor, he was directed by his counsel as follows :

“You may state whether or not, if you know, the United States Oil & Mining Company paid the defendant for the coal hauled, mentioned in the defendant’s third further and separate answer.”

An objection to the command on the ground that it called for the conclusion of the witness having been sustained, an exception was allowed, and it is maintained *268that in refusing to permit the witness to answer as ordered an error was committed. Assuming, without deciding, that the objection should have been predicated on the ground that the command did not relate to any issue in the case whereby the answer would have been immaterial, and that since the proper reason was not assigned a misapprehension of the rules of evidence resulted, it must be conceded that if any error was committed it was subsequently cured, for on the next page of the bill of exceptions the plaintiff, without objection, stated upon oath:

“Neither the United States Oil & Mining Company nor the Diamond Coal Company nor the Denver, Wichita & Memphis Railway Company owes the defendant a cent.”

5. The plaintiff was also asked by his counsel:

“Who, if you know, owned the narrow gauge railroad that was mentioned in the defendant’s answer under the name of Denver, Wichita & Memphis Railroad, between the 1st of December, 1904, and the 15th day of August, 1905?”

An objection to this question on the ground, inter alia, that it was incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial was sustained and an exception allowed. The question did not relate to any dispute involved in the pleadings, and the court properly declined to permit the inquiry to be answered.

In referring to the narrow gauge railroad and its equipment, and also alluding’to the defendant, the plaintiff was further asked on direct examination, “Did you take possession of it under a written contract executed by him?” ' An objection to the inquiry on the ground, inter alia, that it was incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial having been sustained, an exception was saved. The information sought to be elicited by the question was to the effect that, in order to secure the payment of the notes sued on, the defendant executed to the plaintiff *269a chattel mortgage of the railroad, cars, engines, etc., and that, upon a breach of the terms of such conditional sale, possession of the property was taken. At the time the objection last referred to was made, no issue existed in respect to a chattel mortgage. Thereafter, however, plaintiff’s counsel obtained leave to amend the reply' so as to allege such facts, and was then permitted to introduce testimony on that subject. Such evidence was not admissible when the objection was interposed.

6, 7. It is insisted that in permitting the introduction in evidence, over objection and exception, of certain parts of the laws of Arkansas, applicable to Indian Territory, relating to the prescribed rate of interest and to contracts affected by usury, errors were committed. The question to be considered by this assignment is whether or not the order of the court permitting the reply to be amended so as to aver that pursuant to the terms of a chattel mortgage, the plaintiff upon default therein took possession of the narrow gauge railroad and other property which he sold rendered such evidence admissible, when no alteration by interlineation or substitution was made in the reply. Judicial notice of the public and private acts of the legislative departments of Oregon and of the United States will be taken by the courts of this State. Section 729, subd. 3, L. O. L. Where a court will of its own motion and without the production of any evidence upon the subject recognize the binding force of enactments, it is unnecessary to allege the existence of such laws. State ex rel. v. Stevens, 29 Or. 464 (44 Pac. 898). Judicial notice of the laws of another State will not be assumed. State v. Moy Looke, 7 Or. 54. For that reason it is essential for a party relying upon the statute of another State to plead the enactment and to allege such facts as will bring his case within the provisions of the law invoked. Balfour v. Davis, 14 Or. 47 (12 Pac. 89); Long v. Dufur, 58 Or. 162 (113 Pac. 59). *270This rule, however, can have no application to a party who has never had an opportunity to plead such statute.

8, 9. The principle obtains that permission to amend a pleading does not usually amount to an alteration of a party’s formal allegations of his cause of action or the averments of his defense, but where an order has been made granting leave to amend, and the subsequent proceedings in the cause are predicated on the supposition that the change has actually been made, it is proper to treat the order as equivalent to amendment itself. 1 Enc. PI. & Pr., 641, note 1. The exception to the general rule is particularly applicable to a party who has been permitted to amend his pleading so as to allow the introduction of important evidence, although he has not in fact made any alteration or additional averments to his original formal allegations. Treating the amendment of the reply as having in fact been made in conformity with the plaintiff’s request, the allegations of such new matter were deemed to be controverted by the adverse party as upon a direct denial or avoidance. Section 95, L. O. L. The defendant had no efficient cause to anticipate an amendment of the reply relating to a chattel mortgage of property in Indian Territory, and for that reason the law upon the subject applicable to that territory became material and admissible in evidence without alleging in the answer the enactments relied upon or averring such facts as brought his case within the provisions of the law.

10. It is argued that the provisions of the Arkansas law referred to were enactments in effect in that State in 1904, while the laws thereof in force in 1888 were by the act of Congress made applicable to Indian Territory, and that it did not appear that the parts of the law complained of were the same as those of 1883, and hence an error was committed in receiving such enactments in evidence. The Act of Congress of May 2, 1890, *271c. 182, § 31 (26 Stat. 94), made the general laws of Arkansas in force at the close of the general assembly of that State of 1883, as published in 1884 in the volume known as Mansfield’s Digest of the statutes of Arkansas, which were not locally inapplicable or in conflict with any acts of Congress, were extended over and put in force in Indian Territory, and relating inter alia to promissory notes, money, and interest, and to mortgages. 3 Fed. Stat. Ann. 406. The laws of Arkansas received in evidence consisted of a clause of the organic act of that State which, as far as material herein, reads as follows: “All contracts for a greater rate of interest than 10 per cent per annum shall be void as to principal and interest, and the general assembly shall prohibit the same by law” (Const. Ark. Article 19, Section 13)—and parts of the statute, to wit:

“The parties to any contract * * may agree in writing for the payment of interest, not exceeding 10 per cent per annum on money due or to become due.” Section 5380.

“No person or corporation shall, directly or indirectly, take or receive in money, goods, things in action, or any other valuable thing, any greater sum or value for the loan or forbearance of money, or goods, things in action, or any other valuable thing, than in Section 5380 prescribed.” Section 5381.

“All contracts or securities whatever, whereupon or whereby there shall be reserved, taken or secured, or agreed to be taken or reserved, any greater sum or greater value for the loan or forbearance of any money, goods, things in action, or any other valuable thing than is prescribed in this act, shall be void.” Section 5390.

The objections urged against the admission of such parts of the law are based upon the ground that the evidence offered was incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial; that it did not appear that the book containing such provisions of the laws was commonly admitted in the courts of Arkansas; and that the volume mentioned *272only purported to govern the trial of civil actions in Indian Territory. The only error thus assigned that can have any application to the legal principle now invoked is that the evidence complained of trenched upon the objection first noted. The parts of the law of Arkansas received in evidence were rendered competent by plaintiff’s application to amend the reply and the court’s order granting the request as in the particulars herein-before specified. Whether or not the clauses so admitted were the same as those in force in 1883 is a question that does not appear to have been called to the attention of the court. Where a species of evidence is generally material under the issues involved, an objection on the ground of incompetency or irrelevancy ought particularly to point out the reason assigned therefor, so that the trial court might have an opportunity to pass upon the question, and that its action thereon, if assigned as error, might be reviewed on appeal. The objection now insisted upon was insufficient in the particulars noted and no error was committed as alleged.

11,12. In one of the instructions the court told the jury, in effect, that if they should determine that under a verbal agreement it was stipulated that the defendant was to deliver possession of the railroad, equipment, etc., to the plaintiff who engaged to credit the cost thereof upon the notes in question, and they should further find that pursuant to such agreement the plaintiff received the property or a part thereof, the defendant was entitled to have credited upon the notes the value of the property so obtained; or if they should discover that such an agreement was effected, and also find that the plaintiff took possession of the property wrongfully, the seizure under such circumstances was equivalent to a delivery under the terms of the agreement, thereby entitling the defendant to have the value of the property so secured credited upon the notes. In another instruction the court *273said, in substance: If, however, you should find that no verbal agreement was entered into, but that the plaintiff wrongfully took possession of the property and converted it to his own use, the defendant would not, under such circumstances, be entitled to any credit therefor on the notes, for he cannot recover under his counterclaims unless you find that the agreement referred to was consummated. The jury were further instructed to the effect that, under the law applicable to Indian Territory in force during the year 1905, any contract whereby a rate of interest in excess of 10 per cent per annum should be secured was void, and if they found from the evidence a greater rate than thus limited was charged on the notes' in question, on the indebtedness evidenced thereby, the mortgage given to secure such obligations was void, and the taking of the property thereunder unlawful, and such seizure was equivalent to a delivery and acceptance under the agreement to purchase the road, equipment, etc., if they should find such an agreement was made. Exceptions having been taken to these parts of the charge, it is contended that errors were committed in giving them. It is argued that, though the counterclaims were based upon an averment of the defendant’s turning over the property to the plaintiff pursuant to an alleged agreement, the court sanctioned a recovery on the ground of an unlawful seizure of the railroad, etc.

The first separate defense did not arise out of the contract or transaction set forth in the complaint as the foundation of the plaintiff’s demand, nor was it founded on any other express or implied contract, and for these reasons the real transaction could not have been put forward as a counterclaim. Section 74, subds. 2, 3, L. O. L. If in securing the promissory notes described in the complaint any fraud had been practiced on the defendant, he could by answer to that pleading have set forth the facts constituting the deceit and recouped the *274damages which he sustained, because the defense sup- ' posed arose out of the contract or transaction which formed the basis of the plaintiffs action at law. Scheiffelin v. Whetherred, 19 Or. 172 (23 Pac. 898); Foss v. Newbury, 20 Or. 257 (25 Pac. 669). In the case at bar no fraud in obtaining the promissory notes is alleged in the answer, and, if the taking of the property referred to was tantamount to an' unauthorized assumption and exercise of ownership over the railroad and equipment belonging to the defendant, he was not wholly remediless when an action was brought on the notes. The first counterclaim is predicated upon the assumption that the taking of the property amounted to a conversion for which trover, replevin, or trespass would lie, whereby the defendant could waive the tort, treat the plaintiff as his agent who upon the sale of the railroad, equipment, etc., and the receipt of the consideration therefor, might ratify such acts thereby rendering him liable in assumpsit for the money or its equivalent that had been received to the defendant’s use. Cooley, Torts, 91. The principle thus announced is known as the English doctrine which probably prevails in the greater part of the United States. A more liberal rule, however, has been adopted in many of the States where, the conversion having been waived, the wrongdoer can. be sued as for property sold and delivered, whether or not he has disposed of it, and the value of which may be recovered in an action instituted for that purpose. 7 PI. & Pr. 369. The legal principle last asserted is not founded upon the precept of ratification, and if property has been sold by the tortfeasor .for less than its value, unless the owner with full knowledge of the facts relating to the entire transaction accepts the proceeds or a part thereof, he does not, by waiving the tort and bringing an action for the value of the goods, confirm the act, and is not bound by the conduct of the wrongdoer, except so far as mere con*275version is concerned. The averments of the first separate defense were evidently intended by defendant’s counsel and treated by the court as conforming to the more liberal rule referred to—a rule which is believed to be more consonant with reason and more compatible with justice than the English doctrine and should be controlling in the case at bar. One part of the charge wherein the jury were told that the defendant could not recover on his counterclaims unless they should find that an agreement had been entered into, whereby the value of the property taken was to have been credited on the promissory notes, seems to disregard the principle that the tort could have been waived and the worth of the railroad, equipment, etc., applied as indicated. But, however this may be,' the plaintiff was not prejudiced by the use of the language employed. The averments of the first separate defense were sufficient to authorize the giving of the instruction complained of.

13. The court further told the jury in effect that, under the laws applicable to Indian Territory and in force during the year 1905, any contract whereby a rate of interest in excess of 10 per cent per annum should be secured was void, and, if they should find that a greater rate of interest than thus limited was charged on the notes or on the indebtedness thus evidenced, any mortgage given to secure such obligations was void, and the taking thereunder of the property was unlawful and equivalent to a delivery to, and an acceptance by, the plaintiff under the agreement, if they should find that such an agreement was effected. An exception to this part of the charge having been taken, it is contended that an error was thereby committed. It is argued that the notes and chattel mortgage given to sécure their payment were governed by the laws of Missouri, which enactments provide that, as a defense in civil actions in the courts of that State, usury‘may be pleaded, and upon *276proof of that fact all sums of money in excess of eight per cent per annum shall be deemed payment and credited upon the principal debt, and the contract, being otherwise efficacious in the State where it was made, was valid in Indian Territory where it was enforced. In support of the legal principle thus asserted, attention is called to the decisions rendered by the Supreme Court of Arkansas in construing the statute of that State with respect to the rate of interest upon notes given in other states, in which determination it was held that a contract, being supportable by law where it was made, was valid in Arkansas, and that such decisions govern an interpretation of the law applicable to Indian Territory. Thus in Mathews v. Paine, 14 S. W. 463, in an action on promissory notes bearing 10 per cent interest per annum and executed in Tennessee, the answer alleged that the notes in question were given in renewal of other notes on which 12 per cent interest per annum was exacted in contravention of the laws of the State where the contract was made. It was ruled that whether or not the notes were usurious would be determined by the laws of Tennessee where they were made and to be performed, and that under the statute of that State, allowing the recovery of usury, it could not be recouped in a suit on the principal debt.

In Bank of Harrison v. Gibson, 60 Ark. 269 (30 S. W. 39), it was determined that the law as to the rate of interest where the contract was made would govern as to the validity of a charge of a commission for procuring a loan. So, too, in Crebbin v. Deloney, 70 Ark. 493 (69 S. W. 312), it was also concluded that on a note payable in Missouri and secured by lands in Arkansas the laws of the former State would govern the interpretation of the contract. It is asserted that these decisions are controlling and show that the instruction last referred to is not a correct statement of the law upon the subject. It *277was admitted that the notes sued on herein were payable in Missouri, and that the laws of that State, with respect to the rate of interest and to contracts affected by usury, is correctly stated hereinbefore. If, therefore, the evidence in the case at bar had disclosed that the chattel mortgage had been given in Missouri, the decisions referred to would undoubtedly govern in the determination of this cause. The bill of exceptions fails to show where or when the chattel mortgage was executed. It will be remembered that the reply avers that during the years 1904 and 1905 the defendant was an inhabitant of Missouri and of Indian Territory. He could not have been domiciled in both places at the same time. “As a general rule, personal property,” says a text-writer, “is governed by the law of the domicile of the owner, and not by the law of the situs of the property; but a transfer of such property by way of mortgage is an exception to the rule, and the lex situs and not the lex domicilii governs chattel mortgages.” Jones, Chat. Mort. (5 ed.) § 305. In the succeeding section of the work adverted to, the noted author further remarks:

“A mortgage is presumed to have been executed in the State where it is sought to be enforced, until the contrary appears. But there can be no such presumption when the mortgage purports to be executed in another State.”

The evidence shows that the chattel mortgage was enforced in Indian Territory and it does not appear where the conditional sale was executed. It will be presumed, therefore, that it was given in that territory, and hence is governed by the laws applicable thereto. No error was committed in giving the instruction last referred to.

14. The court further charged the jury as follows:

“If you find from the evidence that the defendant was entitled to any credits or offsets against the notes sued upon in -this action, then you are instructed that said *278offsets or credits became due and payable, and should in that event be so construed by you.”

An exception having been taken to this part of the language so employed, it is maintained that an ¿rror was committed in the use thereof. It is argued that the plaintiff was entitled to - the amount of his notes at the time the judgment was given, and that, if the defendant was awarded any sum on account of his counterclaims, no interest thereon was recoverable until the sum so found to be due him was determined by verdict of the jury.

The rule is quite general that, in the absence of an express contract to the contrary, mutual debts do not extinguish each other per se, and that no interest can be collected upon an unliquidated demand, when controverted in a suit or action, until the sum due has been determined by decree or judgment. Raski v. Wise, 56 Or. 72 (107 Pac. 984). In that case the prior decisions of this court upon the subject are collected. This rule, like many others, has its exceptions, and if the jury believed from the evidence received that the averments of the answer were substantiated, to the effect that the parties expressly agreed to credit on the promissory notes the sums set forth in the several counterclaims as ascertained and matured at the time the services, etc., are alleged to have been rendered, the result would be the same as though money had been paid, with directions to indorse the sum so given in the manner indicated, but by mistake or otherwise it had not been done. In an action on the notes, if the payment could be established under the circumstances supposed, the sum thus received would be credited as of the time it was paid. Seitzinger, Ex’r, v. Alspach (Pa.), 4 Atl. 203; Post v. Carmalt, 2 Watts & S. (Pa.), 70 (37 Am. Dec. 484). No error was committed as alleged.

15. The jury were also told in substance that if they should find that the defendant was entitled to any credits *279on the notes, and further concluded that his counterclaims arose in Indian Territory and were payable therein, then the statute of limitations of Missouri, as alleged in the reply, had no application to the case, but that such credits, if any, were governed by the statute on that subject of such territory, and that, since such enactment had not been pleaded, they should consider the statute of limitations last referred to the same as that of Oregon, or a period of six years, and that, if they so found, the credits asserted to be due were not barred when this action was commenced. It is maintained that the language so used was erroneous and violative of an exception taken thereto. It will be seen that his instruction proceeds upon the theory that, if the jury should find that the parties had not expressly agreed that the mutual credits should be self-extinguishing, then the defendant would be charged with interest on the promissory notes from the time they matured until 'the judgment was given, and not be entitled to any interest on his counterclaims until the sums due thereon had been ascertained and determined in the same manner; and, such being the case, the provisions of a statute of limitations of this State governed the recovery. The only question to be considered with respect to the instruction last complained of is whether or not, in the absence of any averment or proof on the subject, it will be presumed that the statute of limitations of Arkansas, which was applicable to Indian Territory, is the same as that of Oregon in relation thereto. This inquiry has been settled by repeated adjudication in this State supporting such deduction, and thus showing that no error was committed as alleged. Goodwin v..Morris, 9 Or. 322; Cressey v. Tatom, 9 Or. 541; Scott v. Ford, 52 Or. 288 (97 Pac. 99); Young v. Young, 53 Or. 365 (100 Pac. 656); De Vall v. De Vall, 57 Or. 128 (109 Pac. 755: 110 Pac. 705); Long v. Dufur, 58 Or. 162 (113 Pac. 59).

*28016. It is maintained that errors were committed in refusing to give requested instructions to the effect that in the written contract referred to a clause was inserted providing that no changes could be made therein except by the written assent of the parties; and, this being so, the burden was imposed on the defendant to show that a writing was executed modifying or abrogating that agreement, and that, if the services set forth in the counterclaims were performed for others, the plaintiff would not have been liable therefor unless he had promised in writing to answer for such debts or defaults.

The defendant testified that, having entered into an oral agreement with the plaintiff to do the specified work, the latter thereafter wanted him to sign a written agreement, giving as reference the name of a bank cashier who informed the witness that plaintiff was very wealthy and personally responsible for any contract that he might make; that at plaintiff’s request and for his convenience' the defendant charged the Diamond Coal Company and other corporations for the services performed, and rendered a statement of the account, and charged the same to Mr. Casner, who made part payments thereon; that the written contract was never fulfilled in that there was a failure to execute the required bonds; that the witness ascertained there was such a corporation as the United States ■ Oil & Mining Company, but it had no assets, and, having learned that fact, the plaintiff in a conference with the defendant about the matter said:

“That we would not consider the contract further, but go ahead with a verbal contract, and he would be responsible for all amounts for excavating, hauling coal, etc., and not consider the United States Oil & Mining Company further than doing business in the name of the United States Oil & Mining Company and the Diamond Coal Company.”

This witness further said:

“My contracts with Mr. Casner were verbal. • I had all my business transactions with Mr. Casner and no one else.”

*281He also said:

“We did all our work under a verbal agreement with Mr. Casner.”

These sworn declarations were denied by the plaintiff who testified generally that none of the work was performed by the defendant for him or at his request, nor did he promise to pay therefor or for any part thereof.

Based on this conflicting evidence the court, after explaining the issue respecting the written and the alleged oral contracts, told the jury, in effect, that if the original credit was extended to the plaintiff to whom the defendant looked for payment, and the charges for such services were made to the corporations at the plaintiff’s request and for his convenience, and if they found this fact was established by a preponderance of the evidence, then the book entries made in accordance with such solicitation were immaterial. The instructions last referred to fairly present the matters embraced in the requests in denying which no error was committed.

17. It is contended that the verdict was returned May 3, 1911, but that the judgment was not rendered until the following day, and hence an error was committed. When upon a question of fact a judgment is rendered, it must be entered the day it is given. Section 201, L. O. L. This clause of the statute was probably designed to create a lien as soon as possible after a verdict is rendered, but whether the provision is mandatory or ministerial is not deemed to be important, for the term “within the day” evidently means within 24 hours, otherwise a verdict returned just before midnight would be ineffectual unless a judgment could be entered thereon before the close of the last moment of that day. Such a rule would be a travesty on justice. It does not appear that the judgment herein was not rendered within the time limited.

Other errors are assigned, but, deeming them unimportant, the judgment should be affirmed, and it is so ordered. Affirmed.

Decided February 25, 1913. (130 Pac. 55.)