The first cause of action in the complaint is to recover the contract price of 2 carloads of potatoes, each consisting of 600 bushels at the agreed price of 65 cents per hundredweight, amounting to $234 per car. The second cause of action is to recover for 3 carloads of potatoes containing 600 bushels, each at the same price or $702. Defendant remitted $819 leaving a balance of $350.46. The *212answer denies the purchase of the potatoes and alleges that the 5 carloads of potatoes were consigned to defendant to be handled for the account of plaintiff and that it did so and had paid plaintiff the proceeds thereof, to-wit: $819, having retained a commission and expenses. It is conceded by defendant that it bought and paid $284 for 'the first carload. About the time the second carload was sent defendant on March 15, 1923, paid plaintiff another $234. On May 24, 1923, defendant sent plaintiff another check for $351.64 purporting to be in payment of the balance on an account rendered in the following form, to-wit:
Statement
Phones: Geneva 2437 Atlantic 0818
Minneapolis, Minn., May 24th, 1923. Mr. H. D. [sic] Reed, Halstad, Minnesota,
In account with W. B. Northrup Company Jobbers and Shippers Potatoes 6Q0 Third Avenue North.
To balance and statement of our account as follows:
Returns GN..........253154 $198.24
“ GN..........49938 150.34
“ CB&Q..........35774 181.30
“ GN..........51512 55.76 $585.64
Amount our draft Mar. 15th, 1923 234.00
Balance 351.64
Plaintiff’s evidence showed an express contract of purchase in each cause of action. The jury found for plaintiff. Defendant has appealed from an order denying its motion for a new trial.
On the trial and now appellant concedes that as to the first cause of action the original contract was. a sale, but it says there was a modification of that agreement resulting in the second car becoming a consignment and that the second check for $234 was to be applied upon an accounting for that car and also for the three cars mentioned in the second cause of action.
*213It is now the contention of appellant that respondent’s acceptance of Exhibit 1 above set forth with the check accompanying the same was an admission of all its claims with reference to the four cars being handled on consignment, and that the cashing of the check and retention of the money made the admission conclusive. No authority is cited in support of this claim. It will be observed that the statement makes no mention of commission or other expense. It would be most unsatisfactory to the customer as an account for the sale of his property. Respondent says that he sold the potatoes outright and we do not think his cashing the check for $351.64, without any statement of appellant as to its claim except as appears from Exhibit 1 and the retention of the money, precludes him from asserting Ms contract as he says it was made. Its character was not such as to commit the respondent, as a matter of law, to the alleged terms of contract as subsequently claimed for the first time by appellant. The character of the statement and the circumstances do not bring it within the doctrine of Western Newspaper Union v. Segerstrom Plano Mnfg. Co. 118 Minn. 230, 136.N. W. 752.
Appellant attacks the charge to the jury. The court made separate reference to the facts in each cause of action, considering the second cause of action first. The court told the jury that if the transaction involving 'the three carloads of potatoes constituted a consignment and not an outright sale “that would end the case/’ This statement was correct because in that event the plaintiff would not have been entitled to recover, even if the jury had found adversely on the one car involved in the first cause of action. The amount of money he had received would then have more than paid Mm in full. All defendant sought was a dismissal. In reference to the instruction relative to the first cause of action the court in part said this: “If the defendant has not sustained the burden of proof as to that modification of the agreement, the plaintiff is entitled to a verdict for the sum that he asked' for in his complaint. If you find that the defendant has sustained the burden of proof and has shown that there was this modified agreement by reason of the defective character of the potatoes, then your verdict should *214be for tbe defendant.” Evidently tbe trial court intended to instruct that, under the conditions favorable to tbe plaintiff, it was entitled to tbe amounts sought in tbe complaint by virtue of tbe first cause of action and, on tbe contrary, if tbe defendant established tbe modified agreement that tbe verdict should be for the defendant as to that particular cause of action. Under our view' of tbe charge it was an inadvertent statement extending beyond tbe limitations of tbe first cause of action and, as such, tbe court’s attention should have been directed to it by counsel.
If, as claimed by counsel, our construction of it is erroneous, then tbe second sentence therein was just as erroneous in favor of tbe defendant as tbe first was erroneous against him, and upon that construction he saw fit to let the matter stand. After unsuccessfully taking his chances with tbe jury be cannot now be beard to complain.
Tbe record shows that, at tbe conclusion of tbe charge, tbe court asked counsel if they thought be bad inadvertently omitted anything, to which they wished to call his attention and the record shows this: “Counsel for defendant claimed instructions as to the first and second causes of action were not accurate or correct and could not be under the testimony.” This language as an exception or objection is futile. The purpose of an exception is to call the attention of tbe court to an error in order that it may then and there be corrected. Counsel must put his finger upon tbe error. Dun. Dig. § 9797. This is a blanket charge and does not disclose to tbe trial court what constituted tbe error. It is in fact meaningless insofar as pointing out tbe vice or error claimed. It was not helpful. We think the erroneous charge was a verbal inaccuracy and not involving a controlling proposition of law. Being such the failure to specifically point out the error at the time precludes the defendant from now urging it. Old Colony Life Ins. Co. v. Moeglein, supra, page 117.
Affirmed.