263 S.W. 471 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1924
The essential allegations of plaintiff's petition, which the evidence adduced on behalf of the plaintiff, if believed, tended to prove, are to the effect that the plaintiff was the owner of certain improved real estate situated on Easton avenue in the city of St. Louis; that he employed the defendant to act as his agent in negotiating an exchange of said property for certain other improved property situated on Lindell boulevard in said city; that the defendant concealed from the plaintiff that he was acting for or was to receive compensation from the owner of the Lindell boulevard property, and induced the plaintiff to enter into a written agreement with one Russell T. Padfield for the exchange of said properties, under the terms of which the plaintiff was to pay Padfield $6000 in cash and convey to him the said Easton avenue property, subject to certain incumbrances, and Padfield in turn was to execute and deliver back to plaintiff a series of notes aggregating $15,500, secured by a second deed of trust on the said Easton avenue property; that shortly after said contract was signed plaintiff learned that the defendant was to receive a commission ostensibly from Padfield, and that plaintiff thereupon notified defendant that he would not be bound by the contract; that thereupon defendant assured plaintiff that he had used his best efforts in the matter and was in a position to and had secured the lowest possible price on the said Lindell boulevard property; that said Padfield was in fact the true owner of said property, and was financially able to pay all obligations growing out of the transaction, including taxes, interest on the first deed of trust, as well as the notes (secured by a second deed of trust on the Easton avenue property) which the said Padfield was to execute and deliver to plaintiff in the event the exchange was consummated, as and when the same would fall due; that defendant further represented that the Lindell boulevard property was worth $60,000 and could not be obtained *6 for less; that the said Lindell boulevard property had bona-fide deeds of trust against it aggregating $41,000; that the defendant, however, concealed from the plaintiff the fact that one of the deeds of trust on the Lindell boulevard property contained an assignment of rents; that each of these said representations made by the defendant was false, and known at the time to the defendant to be false, but that the plaintiff, relying upon the truth of said representations, was induced to and did complete the exchange of the said properties; that in truth and fact the Lindell boulevard property was worth not to exceed $50,000; that the said Padfield was in fact only a straw man and without any financial responsibility whatsoever, and that parties other than Padfield were the real parties in interest; that Padfield failed to pay the taxes upon the Easton avenue property, failed to pay the interest notes on the first deed of trust on the Easton avenue property when the same fell due, and that by reason thereof the Easton avenue property was later sold under a foreclosure sale; that the defendant received $1500 from Padfield and the further sum of $900 from the plaintiff as commission for making the exchange of properties. The petition concludes with a prayer for a judgment of $2400, the aggregate of the two above-mentioned sums alleged to have been received by the defendant as his commission for making the deal. Defendant's answer was a general denial.
As indicated above, the testimony adduced on behalf of plaintiff, if believed, tended to support the allegations of his petition, whereas the testimony for the defendant was in direct conflict with that of the plaintiff, and, if believed, would have warranted a verdict and judgment for said defendant.
The instruction on the measure of damages given by the court at the request of plaintiff below directed the jury that if, under the instructions and the evidence they found a verdict for plaintiff, they should assess the amount of plaintiff's recovery — *7
"(1) At such sum as you may find from the evidence plaintiff paid to defendant as a commission, together with six per cent. thereon from the date when it was paid.
"(2) You should find for him in the further sum equal to the sum of money, if any, you may find and believe from the evidence Altheimer received from William H. Leahy out of the $6,185.26 which Abbey paid on the closing of the deal, together with six per cent. interest thereon from the time when the defendant received them."
The evidence adduced at the trial, and it is abundant and not controverted, conclusively shows that the defendant received $900 from the plaintiff and a check in the sum of $1039 from the plaintiff as his commission, yet, though each of these sums which the defendant received as a commission from the parties to the exchange of properties is uncontroverted, and though it is these said two sums which are specifically set up in plaintiff's petition as the damages sought thereunder to be recovered from the defendant, and further though the instruction on the measure of damages required the jury, if they found for the plaintiff, to assess the amount of plaintiff's recovery at an aggregate sum made up of each of the two items of commission, the jury, though they found for plaintiff, returned a verdict only in the sum of $1039, with interest, being the exact amount which it is conceded defendant received as part commission out of the cash paid by the plaintiff on the closing of the deal, and does not include the $900 item paid defendant by plaintiff.
In light of this situation defendant urges that the verdict is not responsive to the issues raised by the pleadings and the proof, and is directly in the teeth of the instruction of the court on the measure of damages, and that, consequently, no matter what caused the jury to arrive at this erroneous verdict, it is contrary to law, and the trial court should not have allowed it to stand. The point is well taken. *8
Conceding that plaintiff adduced evidence tending to prove the allegations of his petition, there is assuredly no evidence which supports the verdict, "for the verdict is not responsive to the issues nor to any testimony in the case, nor can it be upheld upon any theory of fact or law asserted or claimed by either party to the action, but on the contrary is flagrantly in the teeth of the true law and of the instructions given to the jury by the trial court." [Cole v. Armour,
And in the Cole case, supra, our Supreme Court further ruled that the fact that the party recovering the judgment makes no complaint of the size of the verdict does not make the verdict responsive to any issue or theory of the case.
The sole issue in this case as tried below was the question of false representations vel non. The damages concededly under the pleadings, the evidence and the instructions were unalterably fixed and certain, and so much as in our view as it would be possible in any action ex contractu.
This is not a case where it can be said that the judgment is unquestionably for the right party, for, as we have stated above, the evidence adduced by plaintiff and by defendant is in sharp conflict on the sole issue, namely, false representations velnon, and the jury could with equal propriety under all the evidence have reached a verdict for defendant instead of for plaintiff. There were no equities or mitigating circumstances that the jury could take into consideration, and their verdict may well be viewed as a substitution of their own arbitrary notions of rough justice instead of a compliance with the instructions of the judge as to the law of the case which it was their sworn duty to obey. Clearly in this case, under the record as we have it before us, the verdict, if for plaintiff, had to be for $1939; there is no middle ground which the jury could take, unless arbitrarily and in disregard of the court's instruction. While the rule here sought to be invoked has in the great majority of *9
cases been applied in cases arising ex contractu (Cole v. Armour, supra; Witty v. Saling,
Therefore, in our opinion, the verdict must be viewed as not responsive to the issues raised by the pleadings and the proof, and as directly in the teeth of the instruction of the court on the measure of damage, and, whether this erroneous verdict resulted from confusion or from a willful disregard of the court's instruction, or whether the jurors were unable to agree on the main issue, and compromised their differences by allowing plaintiff to recover only that part of the commission which the defendant received out of the cash money paid by plaintiff to the other party to the contract of exchange of properties, the verdict is contrary to law, and the trial court should not have allowed it to stand.
The record before us discloses that the plaintiff below, after the defendant had filed his motion for new trial, and before said motion had been acted upon by the trial court, filed an "affidavit of plaintiff in opposition to defendant's motion for new trial," in which affidavit plaintiff says "that defendant has waived his right to apply for or obtain a new trial in this cause, for the reason that he has pleaded the same in defense of and as a bar to another action pending between plaintiff and *10 said Eugene J. Altheimer et al. . . ." The court thereafter overruled defendant's motion for a new trial.
It is urged here by respondent, plaintiff below, that the defendant below, by his action in pleading the judgment in the instant case as a bar to the prosecution on the said other action, waived his right to a new trial in the instant case below, and, further, that by said act the defendant expressly or impliedly recognized the validity of the judgment rendered against him, and has thereby waived his right to appeal therefrom. There is no merit in this contention.
Respondent's contention, if allowed, would be tantamount to holding that, after defendant had lost his case in the circuit court below, he would either have to submit to having the judgment stand against him as a finality, though he believed it to be erroneous, or else be compelled to go into the circuit court and again defend himself against another suit for the same cause of action. This is not the law.
Section 1226, Revised Statutes 1919, provides, as one of the grounds for which the defendant may demur to plaintiff's petition, if it appear upon the face thereof, "that there is another action pending between the same parties, for the same cause, in this State," and section 1230 provides that, when any of the matters enumerated in section 1226 do not appear on the face of the petition, objection may be taken by answer. These statutes in our view sufficiently answer respondent's contention. However, even without adverting to the statutes, supra, there is abundant authority holding contrary to respondent's view. In Rodney v. Gibbs,
"In the recent case of Edmonston v. Carter,
"In Ransom v. City of Pierre, reported in 41 C.C.A. 585, Judge THAYER reached the conclusion that the weight of authority as well as reason is that when a case is removed to an appellate court by a writ of error or an appeal and it is not to be tried there de novo, but it is to be determined by an examination of the record, and the judgment either reversed or affirmed or modified, such an appeal or writ of error does not vacate the judgment below or prevent it from being pleaded or given in evidence as an estoppel upon issues that were tried and determined, unless some local statute provides that it shall not be so used pending the appeal. The following cases fully support that view: Creighton v. Keith,
We have considered the other assignments of error, but, in light of our views expressed herein, we deem it unnecessary to advert to them specifically.
For the reasons assigned above, the judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded. Allen, P.J., andDaues, J., concur.