DeWitt v. Williams
DeWitt v. Williams
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court:
The complaint in substance alleges that under a contract between plaintiff and defendant of date March 1, 1904, the former was to furnish the latter, at appropriate times up to March, 1905, all the cream plaintiff might purchase from .his customers in Douglas county, churning cream to be delivered at Denver, Colorado, and the sweet cream at Greenland, Colorado, defendant to accept the same and to pay plaintiff, at his place of business in Douglas county, for the churning cream twenty-six cents per pound for the butter-fat contained therein, and for the sweet cream twenty-seven cents per pound for the butterfat. That in pursuance of said agreement plaintiff furnished defendant large quantities of churning and sweet-cream; that for all of such product furnished prior to June, 1904, defendant made payment; that during June and the first twelve days of July, 1904, under said agreement, plaintiff furnished defendant, at the places .'and times agreed upon, cream containing butter-fat of the value of $1,436.10, of which sum defendant, at sundry times thereafter, paid all except a balance of $643.76. The answer was in the nature of a general denial, with the further plea that defendant had made full payment for everything furnished him by plaintiff on this account or at all. Trial was to the court without a jury, with findings for plaintiff and judgment as stated above.
We have examined the record fully and carefully. There is no law matter involved. It is wholly a question of fact, or series of facts, to be determined
The questions- are, was the contract between the parties as stated by plaintiff, and if so, is there anything yet due him from the defendant for goods furnished under it? Both matters were determined by the court in favor of plaintiff, upon abundant and satisfactory proofs. There is contention that plaintiff failed to fully perform the contract because he did not ship sweet cream as agreed. If true, that' fact should have been pleaded and damages claimed, if any were sustained, for such failure. But no counter-claim or set-off was put forth, and in absence of plea that matter could not be properly considered. The judgment allowed is a fit and proper ending of the controversy. The findings of the court on the facts are binding and conclusive here. There having been no misapplication of the law thereto, the judgment is affirmed. Affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.