Opinion
June 29, 1955.
PRESENT: Flynn, C.J., Capotosto, Baker, Condon and O'Connell, JJ.
1. TRIAL. Motion for Nonsuit. Evidence to Support Declaration. In order for the trial court to deny a motion for a nonsuit there must be at least prima facie probative evidence which reasonably supports the allegations made by the plaintiff.
2. ASSUMPSIT. Motion for Nonsuit. Evidence to Support Action. In action of assumpsit on book account and common counts, for balance allegedly due for merchandise sold by plaintiff to defendant and appearing in open account on plaintiff's books, the only witness for plaintiff had no personal knowledge of the actual sale, of the identity of the plaintiff's salesman or the purchaser, or of any fact which reasonably could give him the right to assume or infer, as he attempted to do, that the sale had been made and credit given to the defendant company. Held, that where the account in writing, which witness had set up in the books of the plaintiff, contradicted his reasoning and statements given in testimony, the trial justice did not err in granting defendant's motion for nonsuit.
3. TRIAL. Motion for Nonsuit. Where on the record there was only one reasonable conclusion to be drawn from the evidence, the question was one of law for the trial justice to determine when defendant moved for nonsuit.
4. PLEADING. Set-off. Right to Prove Under General Issue. A plea in set-off may not be proved under the general issue.
5. PLEADING. Set-off. Nature of Plea. A plea in set-off is not in all respects a plea of confession and avoidance but in effect is the equivalent of a cross action.
6. PLEADING. Plea of the General Issue. Effect of Pleading Set-off. Plaintiff argued that by filing a plea in set-off defendant actually confessed that the account was properly against it and, in effect, that the plea amounted to one of confession and avoidance. Held, that by filing, under the statute, a plea in set-off the defendant did not waive the benefit of his plea of the general issue, nor did he thereby waive the failure of plaintiff to establish by evidence the allegations of his writ and declaration. G.L. 1938, c. 521.
ASSUMPSIT on book account and on the common counts. Defendant filed a plea of the general issue and a plea in set-off. During trial of the case in superior court before a jury the trial justice granted defendant's motion for a nonsuit. Plaintiff filed a single exception to the decision. Exception overruled, and case remitted to the superior court for entry of judgment on the nonsuit.
Temkin Temkin, Alfred M. Silverstein, for plaintiff.
Fergus J. McOsker, for defendant.
This is an action in assumpsit on book account and on the common counts for a balance alleged to be due for merchandise sold by the plaintiff to the defendant and appearing in an open account on the plaintiff's books. The defendant filed first a plea of the general issue and secondly a plea in set-off. The case was tried in the superior court before a jury, and at the conclusion of the evidence for the plaintiff the trial justice granted the defendant's motion for a nonsuit. The case is here on the plaintiff's single exception to such decision.
The plaintiff at the time of this action was a Rhode Island corporation and a distributor of television sets. The defendant named in the writ and declaration is "The J.P. Brady Company, a Rhode Island Corporation." The only witness for plaintiff was its credit manager, who had approved the credit of defendant, had set up the account in plaintiff's books of account, and had the custody and keeping of them. His testimony was to the effect that plaintiff had previous business dealings with Park Square Sales Company, a corporation in the town of North Smithfield, with which it had a separate account; that he had investigated the references and approved the credit of that company; that later in the course of his work as credit manager he received an order on which was written an unsigned notation indicating to him that the references on the Park Square Sales Company account could be used also in connection with the new proposed account with defendant; and that from such notation he also inferred that defendant was the parent company of Park Square Sales Company.
However, he had no personal knowledge of the sale or the parties thereto, and the order was not signed by any salesman or official of the defendant company. Nor could he actually identify the handwriting in the unsigned notation as that of any particular salesman. No reference appears in such order, account, or in plaintiff's books to the effect that it was the account of the defendant company or corporation, or that it was related to the parent company of the Park Square Sales corporation.
He attempted, over objection, to testify that his approval of credit here was based on contents of the order slip which indicated to him, because of the same references, that the two concerns were related. However, he could point out nothing on the order which would reasonably justify such a conclusion. Moreover when pressed for a reason why, if he had made such a conclusion from the notation, he had instituted the account separately in the books in the name of J.P. Brady individually, he was unable to give any reason or to explain the difference. Furthermore he was unable to testify from personal knowledge whether the same salesman had done business with Park Square Sales Company and the defendant, or with J.P. Brady individually rather than The J.P. Brady Company, or whether the two companies were actually parent and subsidiary corporations.
The plaintiff, in opposing the motion for a nonsuit, argues that on such motion the trial justice is obliged to view the evidence and reasonable inferences therefrom most favorably to plaintiff, and that here the trial justice erred in not applying that law to the evidence. It is further argued that any testimony bearing upon the identity of the account in the books involves an issue of credibility and of fact rather than a question of law. Finally he contends that defendant's plea in set-off was tantamount to a plea of confession and avoidance, and therefore that such admission supplied the necessary identifying link between the defendant company and the book account on which the action was based.
[1, 2] We are unable to agree with any of these contentions. The law to be applied on a motion for a nonsuit is correctly stated by plaintiff. Nolan v. Kechijian, 75 R.I. 165; Walling v. Jenks, 62 R.I. 424. Nevertheless there must be at least prima facie probative evidence which reasonably supports the allegations. In the instant case the only reasonable conclusion to be drawn from all the evidence is that the credit manager had no personal knowledge whatever of the actual sale, the identity of the salesman or the purchaser, or of any fact which reasonably could give him the right to assume or infer, as he attempted to state, that the sale had been made and credit given to the defendant company. The account itself in writing, which he set up in the books, contradicts the reasoning and statements which he gave in testimony. The latter was merely his own conclusion unsupported by any fact in evidence or reasonable inference therefrom. And notwithstanding his attempt to relate the transaction and credit to the defendant named in the writ and declaration, he was wholly unable to explain away the undeniable fact that the account was set up by him in the name of J.P. Brady individually and not of the company.
Further, in the absence of any explanation of the facts by the salesman himself or some other witness or official with knowledge of the transaction, the trial justice was justified in finding that there was no evidence to support the claim under either the count in book account or the common counts, and that on this record, there being only one reasonable conclusion from the evidence, the question was one of law for the trial justice to determine.
The plaintiff finally argues that by filing the plea in set-off defendant actually confesses that the account was properly against the company, and in support thereof he cites a general statement from 80 C.J.S., Set-Off and Counterclaim, § 60 b, p. 117, and three old cases from certain other jurisdictions to indicate in a general way that a plea in set-off may be the equivalent of a confession and avoidance.
[4, 5] It appears in most of those cases that the courts were not dealing with the effect of a plea in set-off where there was another prior plea of the general issue. Moreover, whatever may be the law elsewhere it is clear in this jurisdiction that under the express terms of general laws 1938, chapter 521, entitled "Set-Off And Cross Demands," a defendant may plead the general issue first, and may file with it a plea in set-off; that such a special plea in set-off is not provable under the general issue, Arava v. Bebe, 48 R.I. 478; and that a plea in set-off is not in all respects a plea of confession and avoidance but in effect is the equivalent of a cross action. Banigan v. Woonsocket Rubber Co., 21 R.I. 171.
In the instant case, therefore, before we come to a consideration of the effect of the special plea in set-off on which the defendant would have the burden of proof, we must find some probative evidence of a prima facie case in support of the plaintiff's allegations as applied to the plea of the general issue. If there is only one reasonable conclusion from such evidence, considered most favorably to the plaintiff, the issue is a question of law on that plea. Therefore by also filing under the statute a plea in set-off, the defendant did not waive the benefit of his plea of the general issue. Nor did he thereby waive the failure of plaintiff to establish by evidence the allegations of his writ and declaration against this defendant. As the record stands, unexplained by the book entries, the salesman or other competent witness, there was a variance between the allegations and the proof.
The plaintiff's exception is overruled, and the case is remitted to the superior court for entry of judgment on the nonsuit.