Miller v. Cassady

Dillon, Ch. ,1.

justioe of pteadingTprejíidiceh0llt The parties are farmers and neighbors-Plaintiff had a barn and defendant had none. The evidence shows that they lived many years together on good terms, exchanging work and other friendly offices. Shortly before this action was commenced, for some cause, a misunderstanding arose. On the tidal each party was allowed, without objection, to prove every matter which during an intercourse of years would tend to establish a liability against the other. From an examination of the evidence, we are impressed with the belief that if any thing was omitted on either side it was wholly undesigned, and must be im puted entirely to a failure of recollection. Stimulated as their memory was by a rancor altogether disproportioned to the small amount involved, it is not probable that any pecuniary transaction, however minute, escaped them. Each party was allowed by the other full rein — the defendant on his set-off, and the plaintiff on his reply — which *326stated that the matters of labor on the set-off had been paid by services .of a similar kind.

This is one of those cases in which the best, interest of both parties .is. promoted by having a termination of their litigation. Yet if there were manifest error in the record, it would be ■ our duty, however .much we might regret it, to reverse the judgment and order a new trial.

' But it is our opinion that no such error;appears. The plaintiff’ complains of the instructions refused. This complaint has no foundation. Most'of them were embraced in substance in the court’s charge, and none of them, in our judgment, ought tp have been given.

Of those given, the plaintiff excepted only to the following : “ Whatever amount you find due and unpaid to the plaintiff, on his claim, you will find for him' in making up your verdict.” Plaintiff objects to the ■ words “ and unpaid” because there was no proof of payment, and no allegation of it; It is true that there was no formal allegation of payment, but there was a denial of the plaintiff’s account, and as before observed, the parties on each side, and Avithout objection, went into a full investigation of the state of their accounts. We are not dissatisfied with the result, and in a cause originating before a justice, where full and formal pleadings are not required, we cannot reverse the judgment for the specified objection to this instruction.

2. damages : measure of: contract. • But the main error relied on for a reversal, is that the verdict was against the evidence. Aside from the special findings, there is no ground for this obiection. ° , , 0 . J llie testimony, it is true, is conflicting, but, taking it as it appears in the record, we think it probable, if a new trial were awarded, that a third jury would decide as did the two former ones.

Plaintiff claims five bushels in one hundred, for storing eight hundred and fifty-three bushels of wheat, com*327mencing in 1859 ;• that is, he seeks to recover for forty-two and. three-quarter bushels, at two dollars'and thirty-five cents per bushel, that being ■ the- value of wheat at the time he demanded it, on the 6th day of April, 1867.

■ The testimony shows, that, during the years in which the wheat was being stored, the prices of wheat ranged from forty-cents- to seventy-five cents per bushel. In April, 1867, it 'happened to -bear the high price of- two’ dollars. and thirty-five cents!' The court charged, as requested by the plaintiff, that the statute of limitations' would not run against the -plaintiff’s claim until demand; also, that the plaintiff was entitled to recover the price atthé time demand was made. •

■ Under the' circumstances of this ease, we think this-rule of damages-was wrong. The plaintiff would have been entitled to recover, for the wheat stored in 1859,- the value at the time the storing for that year was completed, and, it may be, its value for a reasonable period beyond, and so as respects the subsequent years; but to say that he may delay to make 'demand and to bring suit for seven or eight years,.and th.en select for making.tlie demand a tinie when wheat bears an extraordinary price, and recover such price, would strike every fair mind as unjust; the more so, in this ease, as there is evidence tending to show that the plaintiff, during the same period, obtained from the defendant wheat charged at the rate of seventy-•five cents per bushel in the account of the defendant’s s'et-off.

Allowing the plaintiff the market rates for the number of bushels he claims, and the defendant the amount of, his set-off as returned by the jury, and the verdict, ap-' proximates justice so closely as to require us to allow it tp stand., i

Appellant’s counsel argues that the special finding shows- that-the jury -applied, - bush el. for. bushel, -the wheat *328obtained by plaintiff from defendant as a payment pro tanto for tbe wheat sued for, and that this was wrong because there was no plea of payment.

We answer this as follows :

1. It is not clear that the jury did as claimed. They have not said so.

2. The parties, without objection, went into a full examination of all matters of account, and ■

3. The general result is right, justice has been done, and the verdict should stand, although the processes of reasoning by which the right result was reached may not he defensible.

Respecting the work of juries, it may often truly he said, “ they have bnilded better than they knew.” Their notions of justice are sometimes more to be praised than their powers of ratiocination.

Affirmed.