Butscher v. Yoxall
Butscher v. Yoxall
Opinion of the Court
The appellee recovered a judgment in the lower court for $1,316, alleged in his complaint to he- due him from appellant upon a verbal agreement, made between them, individually, for the purchase and sale of some lambs. The appellant contends that the contract was within the statute of frauds, and that a reversal should be had because the proof did not show such a delivery and acceptance of the lambs as would take the contract out of the statute.
At the time the lambs were delivered and when the appellee demanded the payment for them the appellant refused to pay the agreed price of five cents per pound, although he had accepted the lambs at that time, .but claimed the right to take them on another contract of purchase that the appellee and his partner had made for the sale and delivery of a larger number of lambs, at a less price, with the appellant and his partner. The appellant stated, however, in his testimony that he recognized the lambs delivered at that time to be the lambs which he had agreed to buy from the appellee, individually, under the contract sued upon, at five cents a pound.- and further stated that he was willing to pay for them under this latter contract, provided appellee and his partner, afterwards, should deliver all of the lambs which they had agreed to deliver under the contract made between the two partnerships aforesaid. The contract sued upon was made — and this was conceded — between the appellant and the appellee, as individuals, and not in any way connected with their partnership affairs. Part of' the money due for the lambs, 2,527 in number, under the
The statute of frauds was not pleaded by the defendant in the lower court in his answer, but the case seems to have been tried upon the theory that such defense had been properly pleaded; but, as before stated, the question- as to whether it was or was not pleaded becomes of no importance when it is concluded that the acceptance and part payment was sufficient to avoid the statute. The lower court heard all of the testimony and necessarily came to the conclusion that the statute did
There are no other assignments. of error sufficient’ to warrant any investigation, and, finding no substantial error in the trial, the judgment of the lower court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.