Allen v. Snyder

82 Mo. 256 | Mo. | 1884

Henry, J.

This suit was instituted in the circuit court of Buchanan comity by plaintiff, on a contract by which he undertook to repair and rebuild for defendant a dwelling house which had been injured by fire, having the privilege of using in the work such portions of the old house remaining, as could be safely and properly used, and was to receive $1,575 for the new materials, and the work and labor. $750 of the contract price was paid, and this suit is to recover the balance, and enforce a mechanic’s lien. There are two other counts in the petition which it is nn*258necessary particularly to notice, both relating to other work done, under a different contract from that set out- in the first count.

The answer alleges that plaintiff did not perfom the work mentioned in the first count according to the contract, in this to-wit: lie did not erect said building in the manner he agreed to do. ITe did not remove the remains of the burned building as he agreed to do. He did not erect the new building of the dimensions he agreed to do; nor did he erect the octagon windows as he agreed to do; nor did the plaintiff furnish materials for tlie erection of said building and the performance of said work of the best quality, but on the contrary thereof, the materials furnished by him were of a very inferior quality. That he did not furnish joists for the first floor of the building above the cellar, but used therefor old joists which had been in the burned building, and which being too short to reach to the walls of the building, were spiked to other pieces of timber so as to reach from wall to wall. The porches were not erected and built by plaintiff in the manner he agreed to build and erect them, and those built by him were built of inferior and unsuitable material, and of sizes, dimensions and shapes different from those he agreed to build, and which are inferior in appearance and of much less value than those agreed to be built. That plaintiff wrongfully and fraudulently built said house and porches and performed said work in a very unskillful and unworkman-lilce manner, and out of very inferior and unsuitable material, and to an extent -which renders said building unsafe as a dwelling house, and which is unfit and unsuitable to for the purpose intended. That said plaintiff’ wrongfully and unskillfully placed pai’titions wdthin said building on the floors thereof and off the foundation walls and without any sufficient support whereby said floors were overloaded and the safety of the building endangered audits usefulness greatly impaired.

Defendant further states that shortly after plaintiff *259commenced said work, and before defendant had any notice of the fraudulent acts of plaintiff above complained of, defendant paid plaintiff $750 on account of said work performed and materials furnished, which he avers is more than said work and materials are worth.

Defendant further avers that by reason of the wrongful and fraudulent acts of plaintiff' as aforesaid, and in the improper, unskillful and dangerous manner in which said building and porches were erected, and of the inferior materials used in such erections, defendant has sustained ■damages in the sum of $500, for which he asks judgment, and for all proper relief.

After retiring to consider of their verdict, the jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff for a gross sum, instead of a separate finding on each count.

lion. "W. H. Sherman, judge of the circuit court of Buchanan county, presided at the trial of the cause, but, when the jury returned with their verdict, lion. IL S. Kelly, judge of an adjoining circuit, was, for a reason provided by statute, temporarily presiding at the trial, or in proceedings in another cause, and verbally instructed the jury that if they found for plaintiff on all of the counts, they should say in their verdict the amount found on each ■count, or, if on less than all, they should state in their verdict on which, and the amount. The paper containing the verdict was then returned to the foreman by said judge with directions to repair to their room for further deliberation, and they soon returned with a verdict for plaintiff on each of said counts. All this occurred in the absence of defendant and his counsel. We are not prepared to say that, if Judge Sherman had verbally instructed the jury, after their return into court with an informal verdict, that they should find on each count separately, it would have been reversible error; but waiving that question, Judge Kelly had no jurisdiction to receive the verdict and discharge the jury. So far as this cause was concerned he was not sitting or authorized to sit as a judge, and had no *260control over the jury, and, on this point, the case stands precisely as if any other person, not a judge of any circuit, had taken the bench in the absence of J udge Sherman, and done what Judge Kelly did.

For this error the judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded, and as there must be a retrial of the cause, it will save the labor of examining and passing upon several difficult questions which are presented by this record, if plaintiff will amend his petition by adding a quantum meruit count, for the work and labor, etc., sued for, in the first count of his petition.

All concur.
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