60 Mo. App. 70 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1894
This action is prosecuted to recover damages for breach of a building contract. The plaintiff is a bricklayer, and charges in his petition that the defendant employed him to lay one hundred and twenty thousand brick, and furnish the sand,
Complaint is made in the motion for new trial that the verdict is excessive, which objection was not considered by us in preparing the first opinion filed herein, but is now considered in connection with the complaint that the verdict is not supported ¡by substantial evidence.
The plaintiff himself testified, both in his direct and cross-examination, that he was a brick contractor for a period of almost twenty years; that he went over the items of work which, under his contract, he was required to do at a stated compensation, and that he would have made a profit of $300 on the job if permitted to complete it. This in itself was substantial evidence of what profit plaintiff would have' made. The defendant contends that this general statement of
It appeared in evidence that the work was done subsequently by one Baumann at a lower bid than plaintiff’s. The defendant’s counsel in his opening address to the jury intimated that Baumann had lost money on the job. It appeared in evidence that Baumann had subsequently left the city, and had gone to Colorado. The plaintiff’s counsel in his closing argument to the jury commented on the fact that Baumann was not produced at the trial as a witness for the defendant, and incidentally alluded to the fact that “the arm of the court was strong enough to reach to Colorado,” meaning that Baumann’s deposition might have been taken there. The defendant’s counsel objected to these remarks, and repeatedly asked the court to check counsel,, whereupon the court told the counsel for the plaintiff to confine himself to the evidence.'
The defendant’s counsel now argues that it was