McGregor v. Auld
McGregor v. Auld
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiff’s cause of action is for threshing for the defendant his grain, consisting of many bushels of rye, barley, wheat, and timothy, September 3, 1888, amounting to $174.10. The defendant answered by a counterclaim, stating substantially the following facts:
The defendant is a farmer, and owned and occupied a farm in the town of La Prairie, in Rook county. On and prior to the 27th day of August, 1888, the plaintiff was engaged in the business of threshing grain in said county, with a steam engine and thresher owned by him. The plaintiff then and theretofore held out to the public, as well as the defendant, that he was skilled in the use of 'the engine and machine; that he employed none but skilled men to assist him; that said engine and machine were of the best and latest pattern; that their use was safe, and free from danger of fire therefrom; that his engine had all the modern improvements to arrest sparks and prevent the dropping or scattering of fire, and that they were in good condition; and that there was no danger of loss or damage by fire from its use under his care and management. The defendant, believing said representations, and having no knowledge to the contrary, hired said plaintiff and his assistants, with said engine and thresher, to thresh his grain, then in stack upon his said farm. In pursuance of said hiring and agreement, and under said representations, the plaintiff, on said 27th day of August, 1888, entered upon said premises with his said engine and threshing machine and men, and began and continued threshing for the defendant (except Sunday) until the 3d day of September, 1888. Having finished threshing for the defendant on that day, about 9 o’clock a. m., the plaintiff fired up his said engine, unnecessarily using
The action was brought before a justice of the peace, and the plaintiff demurred to the counterclaim, and the demurrer was overruled, and the plaintiff recovered a judgment of $209.47 and costs, the defendant not having offered any testimony to sustain his counterclaim; and the defendant appealed to the circuit 'court of Eock county from said
The sole contention of the appellant on the demurrer is that the matters set up in the answer do not constitute a counterclaim under the statute, or that they do not constitute “ a cause of action arising out of the contract or transaction set forth in the complaint as the foundation of the plaintiff’s claim, or connected with the subject of the action.” Sec. 2656, E. S. It has been a question whether this statute of counterclaim has enlarged the civil or common law doctrine of recoupment. In the civil law “the defendant was permitted to exhibit his claim against the plaintiff for allowance, provided it arose out of or was incidental to the plaintiff’s cause of action;” and at common law “'the defendant’s claim for damages against the plaintiff was for the violation of some obligation imposed by the contract, or some duty imposed by the law in the making or performance of it.” This doctrine of recoupment, as well as the counterclaim under the statute, obtains only when the “plaintiffs cause of action is in contract, as in this case. When the plaintiff’s cause of action is in tort, whether the other clauses of the section — “or transaction,” “or connected with the subject of the action,” — are especially applicable we need not inquire. This counterclaim can be sustained only because it “ arose out of the contract set forth in the complaint as the foundation of the plaintiff’s claim.” In this respect, recoupment and the counterclaim of the statute are the same. By this test, then, this counterclaim must be sustained, if at all: Did the defendant’s cause of action arise out of the contract between the plaintiff and the defendant for the threshing of tbe defendant’s
It was a part of that contract, according to the. answer, that the plaintiff should use a steam-engine thresher in every respect the best, and with the latest improvements, and should not allow sparks or fire to escape to endanger the defendant’s property, and that it should be skilfully and carefully used'and handled by-the plaintiff and his men. It is clearly within the contract that the defendant’s property should not be destroyed or injured by fire escaping from the engine by reason of its imperfect character or want of repair, or of the negligence of the plaintiff or bis men in handling or using it on the defendant’s farm. This is the gist of the contract in relation to the engine the plaintiff was to use. It was at best a dangerous machine, and the defendant saw fit to place the plaintiff under the severest terms and' stipulations for his careful use of it, as well as of the perfect character of the engine itself. As soon as the plaintiff had finished the threshing, he fired up the engine with wood, and drove it near the straw stacks, and stopped it there, and then started again with a fresh blast of sparks from its unprotected smokestack, with the wind in the direction of the stacks. The plaintiff had not left the ground with his engine among the straw stacks where he had done the threshing, before he caused the burning of the defendant’s property by it. The facts of the representations of the character of the' engine, and of the specific stipulations of the plaintiff as to his own care and that of his men in using it, are set forth in the answer with great particularity and skill; but, as said by the learned counsel for the respondent in their brief, “ there was an implied agreement that the plaintiff had a fit and proper machine, and that he and his men were skilled in its use; that there was no danger of fire therefrom; and that he would execute his undertaking with due care, and without loss or injury to the defendant.”
But the litigated question on this appeal is whether the matters set up in the answer arose out of the contract on which the action is .brought. The authorities cited by the learned counsel in analogy to this case are not very much aid in determining this question. Each case must rest upon its own peculiar facts. The matters of this counterclaim are so clearly within the contract, and arose out of it, that authorities are not needed. A kindred question, however, in relation to employees of railway companies, as to whether an employee is within the terms of his contract of employment while coming to or going away from his work at a particular place, has- been decided by this court. In Ewald v. C. & N. W. R. Co. 70 Wis. 420, it was held that one employed to wipe and take care of engines in the roundhouse, who was injured while on his way to and distant from the roundhouse to go to his -work, was within his contract of employment as much as when he was actually at work in the roundhouse, and that he could not recover because injured by the negligence of a co-employee at the time. It was held, also, that the company owed him a duty, as an employee, to keep open and safe his passageway to his work over its tracks. The reason given would seem to apply to this case. Iiis going and coming were incidental to and a means and facility of his labor, and necessary ingredients of the contract of employment.
By the Court.— The order of the circuit court is affirmed.
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