Brady v. Ranch Mining Co.
Before: Burnett
Synopsis
The facts are stated in the opinion of the court.
Opinion
The appeal is from an order denying defendant's motion for a new trial. There are nineteen counts in the complaint, each presenting a separate cause of action assigned to plaintiff. The findings and judgment were in favor of plaintiff as to all the counts except three, which were dismissed at the trial. Appellant questions the sufficiency of the evidence only as to the first, fourth, fifth and sixteenth counts of the complaint. The first cause of action is upon an account stated, and the point urged in this connection is that the account was admitted without sufficient preliminary proof of the agency of one Stanford, who assumed to represent the defendant. But granting that the ruling was erroneous, it was without prejudice, for the reason that proof of the agency was immediately thereafter supplied.
It is well settled that the order of proof is largely within the discretion of the trial court, and its action will not be reviewed unless there be an abuse of that discretion. (Gordon v. Searing, 8 Cal. 50; Lick v. Diaz, 37 Cal. 445;Crossett v. Whelan, 44 Cal. 203; People v.Shainwold, 51 Cal. 469.)
The agency was sufficiently shown by the testimony of Charles Estey, "that Richard B. Stanford was a superintendent and general manager of the defendant Ranch Mining Company; his name was signed to all its checks, and he attended to all its business and had charge of its mine and mining property in Tuolumne county for two years and perhaps before September, 1905."
The fourth count relates to the assigned claim of one Joe Keeney. A paper in the following language was received in evidence: *Page 184
"Springfield, Cal., June 4, 1905.
"To the Ranch Mining Company.
"Please pay the amount of my time check $12.75 to Mr. Emmet Murphy and oblige.
"JOE KEENEY
"Pay to J. J. Brady.
"E. MURPHY."
Plaintiff testified that he had received this paper from Emmet Murphy, and that he had received no other assignment of the Keeney claim from anyone. Appellant now urges that the signatures of Keeney and Murphy were not proven, and that the paper is not an assignment of Keeney's claim, but a mere request to defendant to pay to said Murphy the amount of Keeney's time check.
Assuming that there is ground for appellant's assertion, the point should not be considered, for the reason that at the trial "it was stipulated and admitted by defendant that the amount sued upon in plaintiff's fourth cause of action was the correct amount due."
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