Holt v. Lycurgus
Holt v. Lycurgus
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiff brought his action to recover $710.96 of defendant, whereof $581.12-g was a balance of account and the rest interest. The bill of particulars of the complaint showed credits or payments made by defendant, one of which is an item, a note for $410. The defendant filed a general denial and also contra claim of a note $431.25; a $110 I. O. U. and a $30 I. O. IJ. The plaintiff filed no denial to this set off of defendant until the opening of the case for trial, when he filed a denial and also plea of payment, to the item $431.25 note, with an affidavit of merits. Ho affidavit of merits was made to the items, the I. O. U.’s for $110 and $30. The defendant had taken no steps to default plaintiff or bar him from contesting the set off. The Court in its discretion allowed the answer to the set off and the defendant excepted.
An affidavit of merits accompanied the request to make answer to set off of defendant, and from the case itself we cannot say that there was an abuse of discretion in the Court allowing the answer, there being no default taken out.
The defendant excepted to the verdict on the ground that the evidence did not support it and that the jury had no proper basis on which to render the verdict they did.
The jury apparently allowed the amount of plaintiff’s claim $581.12^ as principal and deducted therefrom $110 and $30, I. O. U’s allowed to defendant and the further sum of $21.25, leaving a balance of $419.87 for which they found a verdict for plaintiff and interest thereon from Oct. 4, 1891.
The item $431.25 was in dispute and the plaintiff claimed it was the same as the allowance of the $410 note made to defendant in plaintiff’s bill of particulars, except this, that he received cash and a wagon together of the value of $410 and there was a small account owing Lycurgus for merchandise $21.25 and that was put in the note making it $431.25 but that it was the same item and an error of his counsel in not putting in the correct figures. Ho books of account were
The interest may be considered as damages and upon a calculation of interest upon each item shows that the jury might have awarded a larger sum as interest. The defendant is not injured by the award against him of a less sum as interest and the verdict must stand.
Exceptions overruled.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- JAMES R. HOLT, Jr. v. GEORGE LYCURGUS
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published