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Pitts et al. v. Crane

Oregon Supreme Court
May 26, 1925
114 Or. 593 (Or. 1925)

Opinion

Argued March 26, 1925

Affirmed May 26, 1925

From Douglas: JAMES W. HAMILTON, Judge.

For appellant there was a brief over the names of Mr. Albert Abraham and Mr. O.P. Coshow, with an oral argument by Mr. Abraham.

For respondents there was a brief over the names of Mr. George Neuner, Jr., Mr. B.L. Eddy, Mr. John T. Long and Mr. H.W. Evans, with an oral argument by Mr. Neuner.



This is a joint action brought by Vern W. Pitts and Lucile Pitts, husband and wife, to recover wages for labor. Plaintiffs allege that for ten months, at the special instance and request of George A. Crane, defendant herein, they jointly performed labor for defendant on and about his farm, of the value of $75 per month, no part of which has been paid except $68. They aver that by reason of their demand for the payment of wages, made upon defendant more than forty-eight hours prior to the commencement of the action, they are entitled to recover a reasonable sum as attorneys' fees.

Defendant, answering, denies each and every allegation of the complaint except that portion admitted by him in his averments. He alleges that Vern W. Pitts performed labor of the reasonable value of $67, and no more, for which he has been fully paid, and that the defendant, in addition thereto, has advanced to him the sum of $7.25. He then avers that it was mutually agreed between plaintiffs and defendant that, in consideration of the plaintiff Lucile Pitts' doing the house work and cooking for plaintiffs and defendant, and the plaintiff Vern W. Pitts' doing the chores, the defendant would supply the plaintiffs with board and lodging for themselves and an infant child during the time they lived with defendant on his farm, and that, for the same consideration, Lucile Pitts should do such additional cooking as might be necessary for harvest hands or other employees.

The defendant pleads performance, on his part, of the agreement set forth in his answer. He likewise pleads a counterclaim of $50 on account of board, lodging and nursing furnished to Lucile Pitts by one Martha Bass and assigned by her to defendant.

Plaintiffs' reply denies every allegation of defendant's answer.

On the trial, plaintiffs supported their contention by the testimony of fourteen witnesses, while the defendant produced eighteen witnesses in support of his defense. At the conclusion of the plaintiffs' case, the defendant filed a motion for directed verdict upon the following grounds: that plaintiffs alleged a joint contract while the evidence showed a several obligation; that there was no evidence of the "going wages" for services claimed by the plaintiffs; and, that there was a variance between the complaint and the evidence. The court overruled the motion, and defendant, by his attorneys, reserved an exception

As a result of the trial, the jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs in the total sum of $517. From a judgment entered thereon, the defendant appeals to this court, assigning error of the court in overruling defendant's motion for a directed verdict; in giving certain instructions; and, in making certain rulings involving the reception of the evidence at the trial of the cause.

AFFIRMED.


This action is predicated upon the supposition that the contract declared upon is joint, and not several.

The contract is joint or it is several. It cannot be regarded as both joint and several. If it is a joint contract, it was not only proper, but necessary, that both the husband and wife join in the action as plaintiffs. But, if it is several, the plaintiffs cannot sue jointly: 1 Code Pleading and Practice, Sutherland, § 18; 15 Ency. Plead. Prac. 528; 4 Page on The Law of Contracts (2 ed.), §§ 2078, 2079. The reason for the rule requiring the plaintiffs to join as such in an action upon a joint obligation is concisely stated by Sutherland, a recognized authority, as follows:

"In the first place it prevents a multiplicity of suits, and in the second place `a defendant who has made but one contract or incurred a single liability has the right to require that the whole case be disposed of in one action.' In such a case the plaintiff or plaintiffs must represent the entire cause of action, and the plaintiff or plaintiffs thus representing the entire cause of action must be the `real parties in interest.' In other words, a single cause of action cannot be divided." 1 Code Pleading and Practice, Sutherland, § 18.

Our statute enacts that, except as otherwise provided, an action must be carried on in the name of the real party in interest: Or. L., § 27. And this court has uniformly held that the above section was enacted for the benefit of the defendant, to protect him from being harassed by different suits or actions arising from the same cause: Sturgis v. Baker, 43 Or. 236 ( 72 P. 744); Simon v. Trummer, 57 Or. 153, 159 ( 110 P. 786); Devlin v. Moore, 64 Or. 433, 441 ( 130 P. 35); Blaser v. Fleck, 96 Or. 187 ( 189 P. 637).

A contract must be proved as alleged; and where, as here, the contract is averred to be joint, the proof must disclose a joint, and not a several, contract.

The defendant quotes the following from 20 R.C.L. 674, 675:

"When a contract has been made with several persons under which a separate duty arises to each, in contemplation of law it is the same as if a separate and distinct contract had been entered into with each separately and they must sue separately."

The editors support this statement of the law by Hall v. Leigh, 8 Cranch, 50 ( 3 L.Ed. 484, see, also, Rose's U.S. Notes).

While we are in accord with the principle set forth above, it does not apply to the facts in the case at bar. The action in the case of Hall v. Leigh, supra, was brought to recover the proceeds of 100 bags of cotton, shipped to the defendants to be sold by them. The plaintiff and another made a joint shipment to the defendants, at Liverpool, of 200 bales of cotton, to be sold by defendants on commission. The shipment was accompanied by an individual communication from each consignor, informing the defendants that each shipper owned one half of the cotton, and giving separate and varied instructions to the consignee relating to the disposal of each half of the cotton and accounting for the proceeds thereof. Based upon these facts, the court held that the separate action by one of the consignors against the consignee for violation of his separate instructions had been properly maintained.

In the case of Lyon v. Bertram et al., 20 How. 149, 156 ( 15 L.Ed. 847, see, also, Rose's U.S. Notes), the Supreme Court of the United States, speaking through Mr. Justice CAMPBELL, said:

"The plaintiffs are shown to be the parties jointly interested in the subject of the action, and in the claim for relief. It is quite immaterial in what proportions they may be concerned. Their case is substantially established, when their joint interest is shown, and the error in respect to the degree of the interest of the several parties is not such a variance as will be considered."

To the same effect is Pomeroy's Code Remedies (4 ed.), § 116.

Did the court err in overruling the defendant's motion to direct a verdict? This is the decisive question in this case. At the hearing the defendant, through his counsel, in order to establish that the verdict returned by the jury was unjust and founded upon prejudice, ably and earnestly marshaled the evidence adduced upon the trial of the cause in the court below.

From a careful review of the somewhat voluminous record, we find a sharp conflict in the testimony. It is undesirable to encumber our reports with a mass of testimony in order to support our ruling in this case. However, we have read and digested the testimony of the fourteen persons testifying on behalf of plaintiffs, and we find that there is some competent evidence sustaining plaintiffs' claim in the matter of labor jointly performed for the defendant and at his request. On the other hand, from the testimony given by the eighteen witnesses on the part of the defendant, we find evidence to the effect that at the time of the averred contract the defendant, a farmer residing at Melrose, in the Umpqua Valley, had completed his farming operations for the year; that the busy season was over; that his harvest had been gathered; that the early part of winter had arrived when the plaintiffs, a recently married couple who had come to the county some time before, appeared, seeking a place to stay; that they were homeless, and that the wife was soon to become a mother; that the defendant, George A. Crane, although he then had no work for them to do, made his averred contract in view of plaintiffs' situation and in anticipation of defendant's requirement for help at farming during the succeeding harvest period. Having found some competent evidence to support each material allegation of the complaint, we hold that the motion to direct a verdict for defendant was properly overruled. Again, this court is precluded from considering the weight of contradictory evidence, and the verdict in such case is conclusive. Our fundamental law provides:

"No fact tried by a jury shall be otherwise reexamined in any court of this state, unless the court can affirmatively say there is no evidence to support the verdict." Or. Const., Art. VII, § 3-c.

Because of the contradictory testimony set out in the record before us, we cannot decide that there is no affirmative evidence of a joint contract, or of the "going wages" for the services claimed by plaintiffs.

Now, recurring to that averment in the motion alleging a fatal variance between the allegations of the complaint and the evidence: A variance between the allegations of the complaint and the evidence is not material, unless the adverse party has actually been misled, to his prejudice in maintaining his defense: Or. L., § 97; Wehrung v. Portland Country Club, 61 Or. 48 ( 120 P. 747). In the case just noted, it was held that the record contained no proof that the defendant had been misled, to its prejudice. That is true in the case at bar.

Defendant challenges the correctness of the instructions given by the court.

The court's exposition of plaintiffs' pleading is not strictly accurate as to the averments of that document with reference to the particular work to be performed by the plaintiffs, and is somewhat involved, in this: the court confuses the averments of the pleading with some of the evidence given in support thereof. However, we have carefully read this instruction and are unable to see how the defendant was injured thereby.

Defendant also objects to Instruction No. 2. It must be borne in mind that the various instructions are to be taken and construed together; and, when this instruction is read in connection with Instruction No. 10, defendant's objection is answered.

Instruction No. 8 is not objectionable.

We now pass to the exceptions reserved relating to the ruling of the court during the reception of the evidence. The defendant offered to prove by Mrs. Kahler that she had offered to work for defendant for her board and lodging. This testimony was not relevant to prove or disprove any issue made by the pleadings, and was properly rejected.

E.H. Crane was asked a question which called for his opinion as to the necessity for, and extent of, additional farm work to be done on the defendant's place beyond what the defendant himself could do, and the court properly sustained an objection thereto.

Mamie Handy, in response to a question as to the reasonable value of Lucile Pitts' work at the defendant's place, answered:

"Well, in that case, it would be worth him — Mr. Pitts' and her board. That is, the kind of work she had to do."

The court sustained a motion to strike, on the ground that the answer was not responsive to the question. In the very next question the substance of the former was repeated, and the witness answered that the value of Mrs. Pitts' services "would be $20 a month." The witness having been permitted to answer the question, the defendant was not injured.

Another objection relates to hearsay testimony given by Charles A. Stubbs. This witness had testified to a number of matters, including that of woodcutting by the plaintiff, Vern W. Pitts, when, in response to a question as to how he knew Pitts was cutting wood, he answered that Pitts had told him so. Were this the only testimony relating to the cutting of wood for defendant by this plaintiff, the ruling of the court in refusing to strike the hearsay testimony, upon proper motion, would be deemed serious. But, following the objectionable testimony witness testified, in effect, that he had seen Pitts cutting wood. Moreover, the record is full of competent evidence by both the plaintiffs' and the defendant's witnesses, and even by this defendant himself, that he helped to cut forty-seven tiers of wood for the defendant.

When prejudicial error affirmatively appears on the face of the record, this court cannot presume that it is harmless. The matter rendering it harmless should appear in the bill of exceptions: Nickum v. Gaston, 24 Or. 380, 392 ( 33 P. 671, 35 P. 31); Durkee v. Carr, 38 Or. 189, 196 ( 63 P. 117, and cases therein noted). We have already pointed out that the record contains evidence which renders harmless Stubbs' hearsay testimony.

This case is affirmed. AFFIRMED.

COSHOW, J., took no part in the hearing or consideration of this case.


Summaries of

Pitts et al. v. Crane

Oregon Supreme Court
May 26, 1925
114 Or. 593 (Or. 1925)
Case details for

Pitts et al. v. Crane

Case Details

Full title:VERN W. PITTS AND LUCILE PITTS v. GEORGE A. CRANE

Court:Oregon Supreme Court

Date published: May 26, 1925

Citations

114 Or. 593 (Or. 1925)
236 P. 475

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