Goldstein v. Lathrop-Hatten Lumber Co.
Goldstein v. Lathrop-Hatten Lumber Co.
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiff, a lumber manufacturer and dealer, sued defendant on the common counts for lumber furnished to and used by defendant. Trial was had on the general issue to the complaint, which resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff for the amount claimed. The evidence tended to show that plaintiff shipped and delivered to defendant several lots of lumber, which defendant used in the construction of his residence; that the shipments were made by plaintiff to defendant in pursuance of orders and specifications given by the defendant to another lumber dealer; that this dealer forwarded the orders to plaintiff, who shipped and delivered to defendant in accordance with these orders, sending bills thereof to the defendant, but sometimes to the other dealer, who collected them from defendant for plaintiff. Defendant declined to pay the last bills, and this action is to recover the balance due.
The only defense attempted was to show a special contract between the defendant and a third party to furnish the lumber in question to defendant, and to show
Something is said in brief of counsel as to plea of recoupment; but no such plea appears in the record proper, nor does it otherwise appear that there was a trial on such issue, so that we can treat the case as if tried on this issue.
The error — if such it was — in allowing the witness to testify that he sent bills to defendant, instead of producing the bills themselves or sufficiently accounting for their absence, was cured, because the defendant, to whom they were sent, testified that he did not have them, and that other bills sent him were lost. Hence a demhnd on him, the only custodian of them, would have been useless.
The judgment of the trial court must be affirmed.
Affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.