Shrimpton & Sons v. King

Decision Date21 March 1894
Docket Number5479
Citation58 N.W. 286,39 Neb. 779
PartiesALFRED SHRIMPTON & SONS v. H. P. KING
CourtNebraska Supreme Court

ERROR from the district court of Saline county. Tried below before HASTINGS, J.

AFFIRMED.

George H. Terwilliger, for plaintiffs in error.

J. D Pope, contra.

RYAN C. POST, J., not sitting.

OPINION

RYAN C.

The plaintiffs in error were plaintiffs in the district court and by petition therein filed claimed against the defendant a judgment for $ 194.21, with interest and costs. The right to this judgment was predicated upon an alleged sale by the plaintiffs to the defendant of two great gross and one hundred and twenty-nine and two-thirds packages of pins. The defendant in his answer admitted that he ordered of the plaintiffs three gross papers of pins, for which he agreed to pay at the rate charged in the petition, that is, three and seven-eighth cents per paper, and that the total amount due was, at the time of the answer filed, $ 16.74. The defendant, further answering, averred that before the action was brought he tendered to the plaintiffs in payment of said pins the sum of $ 16.83, which plaintiffs refused to receive, and defendant alleged that he has ever since been, and still is, ready to pay that amount to the plaintiffs, but that plaintiffs refused to receive the same; and the defendant averred that with his answer he brought into court said sum and tendered the same to the plaintiffs. For a reply to this answer the plaintiffs denied each and every allegation therein contained. It would seem doubtful upon this condition of the pleadings whether or not judgment should have been rendered for at least the amount tendered. In the absence of a reply denying that that amount was due and denying the tender of it, most certainly plaintiffs should have recovered judgment for the sum admitted to be due and tendered. By replying, however, the plaintiffs put in issue the alleged tender as well as the fact averred by the answer, that that amount was due. Upon a trial had to the court, a jury having been waived, judgment was rendered generally in favor of the defendant and plaintiffs' cause of action was dismissed. There was filed a motion for a new trial, but in respect to that motion no action seems to have been taken; at least the record fails to disclose whether or not it was ruled upon and whether or not any exceptions were taken to any ruling. In the case of Jones v. Hayes, 36...

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