Blatz v. Lester

54 Mo. App. 283 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1893

Ellison, J.

— This is an action on an account for the purchase price of certain chattels alleged to have been sold and delivered to defendant. Defendant’s •answer was a general denial. At the trial he was permitted, over plaintiff’s objection, to give evidence showing that the chattels were a gift from plaintiff to him.. This ruling was right. The answer need only set up new matter; and an allegation of the gift of chattels which are charged in the petition to have been sold is not new matter. Proof of a gift is one mode, and a legitimate mode, of disproving the allegation of a sale. It does not confess a sale and avoid it by some supervening fact, but its effect is to deny the sale. Such proof supports a general denial. Judge Black says in *285State ex rel. v. Rau, 93 Mo. 130, that, if the facts stated in the answer show a non-liability, though the facts stated in the petition are true, then they are new matter. But if the facts stated in the answer simply show that the facts stated in the petition are not true, then they are not new matter, though stated in an affirmative-form, and need not have been specially set out; as a general denial would have sufficed to let them in evi-. denee.

In this case, if the defendant had set out in his answer that the chattels were a gift to him he would have been simply stating facts in detail which showed the allegations of the petition were not true. He could do the same thing as well, if not better, by a simple-denial. ■

The court’s instructions were proper and were based upon sufficient evidence to authorize them. The first is elementary law. The second was justified by all the evidence in the cause on the subject of the instruction. The same can be said of other instructions which are attacked as hot having evidence to sustain them. The ■ fourth instruction states in substance that if the fixtures were given to defendant as an inducement for him to purchase beer of plaintiff, then the gift was good though in fact defendant afterwards failed to so purchase his beer. This was correct. If the gift was complete, the fact that defendant failed in what plaintiff hoped and expected of him, could not alter the gift.

There was no such ease presented by the evidence here as required the court to explain to the jury the legal nature or definition of a gift. After a consideration of all the points made by appellant, we have concluded that no error has been committed materially affecting the'merits of the cause (Revised Statutes, 1889, sec. 2303), and we therefore affirm the judgment.

All concur.
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