Jackson v. Kansas City Packing Co.

Minnesota Supreme Court
Jackson v. Kansas City Packing Co., 42 Minn. 382 (Minn. 1890)
44 N.W. 126; 1890 Minn. LEXIS 38
Gilfillan

Jackson v. Kansas City Packing Co.

Opinion of the Court

Gilfillan, C. J.

The complaint alleges, among other causes of action, that on July 1, 1888, the defendant, as agent of and at the request of plaintiff, collected and received from the Wabash Western Railway Company, for the use and. benefit of the plaintiff, the sum of' $1,095.58, which defendant, on demand, refused to pay plaintiff. The answer contains only a general denial. At the trial, plaintiff introduced evidence tending to prove his cause of action. Defendant then offered to prove, in effect, that after the plaintiff had placed the claims against the railroad company in the hands of the defendant for coilectión, he assigned the amount of them to defendant, to be applied on an indebtedness claimed by it to exist in its favor against plaintiff. If defendant collected- the claims as agent of plaintiff, its duty to pay *383the amount to him, when demanded, then arose; and any matter, such as payment or otherwise, to discharge it of this duty, could not be proved under a mere denial that it collected and received the money as agent. It would be new matter, not covered nor suggested by the denial.

In offering evidence, the party offering it must make it appear, from the offer, or from that in connection with evidence already in, that the evidence offered is admissible under the pleadings. The defendant did not comply with this requirement. There was nothing in the evidence already in, nor in the offer, nor both, from which the court could see with certainty that the arrangement offered to be proved was before the collection by defendant. Certainly, proof of any such arrangement could have no bearing on the issue made by the general denial, unless it was such as to show in what character the defendant made the collection, — whether as agent or as principal, —and whether, at the time when collected, the money was plaintiff’s or defendant’s. That question could not be affected by any arrangement made subsequent to the collection. The court was therefore Tight in excluding, on objection, the evidence offered.

Order affirmed.

Reference

Full Case Name
Joel G. Jackson v. Kansas City Packing Company
Status
Published