44 Mo. App. 338 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1891
This was an action for damages for deceit. The substance of the petition is that the plaintiff and his associates authorized the defendants, as their agents and trustees, to purchase a mine from its owners upon the lowest and best terms; that, in pursuance of said agency and trusteeship, the defendants purchased the mine from the owners for the sum of $5,000 in cash and $5,000 in stock of a corporation thereafter to be formed to work said mine; that the defendants, designing and contriving to cheat the plaintiff out of the sum of $333.33, did falsely and fraudulently represent to the
A second count of the petition sets up the same cause of action in one Imbs, and alleges an assignment of the cause of action by Imbs to the plaintiff.
The answer was a general denial.
The case went to trial before a jury, and the plaintiff had a verdict and judgment, from which the defendants prosecute this appeal.
Section 1990 of the Revised Statutes of 1889 (R. S. 1879, sec. 3462) provides that: “ Every action shall be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest, except as otherwise provided in the next succeeding section; but this section shall not be deemed to authorize the assignment of a thing in action not arising out of contract.” It is plain that the cause of action under consideration did “arise out of contract.” A subscription to a corporate or other venture is a contract among the several ’ subscribers. This action, as counsel for the defendants argues, is an action by a principal or cestui que trust, against his agent or trustee," for misconduct and deceit, whereby the plaintiff has been cheated. Primarily it is, no doubt, an action for deceit —that is, an action founded upon tort; but this statement shows that it arises out of contract; namely, out of the contract by which the relation of principal and agent, or of trustee and cestui qtie trust, has been created. A decision of this court, affirmed by the supreme court on the opinion of this court, construing the analogous expression in the statute relating to
This leaves little to be said upon the objection that, so far as the second count is concerned, the action is not prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest. The statute above quoted requires actions to be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest, with the exceptions named in the next section, and one of these exceptions is that an action may be prosecuted in the name of the trustee of an express trust. There was evidence tending to show that the assignment was made upon an agreement that the plaintiff would prosecute the action, and, if successful, that the fruits of it should go to the assignee, Imbs. This made the plaintiff the trustee of an express trust for Imbs, and leaves nothing in this objection.
Section 2188 of the Revised Statutes, 1889, requires that all instructions on any point of law arising in the cause shall be given by the court before the case is argued and submitted to the jury. The charge of the court precedes the argument of counsel to the jury, and hence counsel should be confined, in their argument from legal premises to the propositions of law embodied in the court’s instructions. 1 Thomp. Trials, sec. 951. The same section of the statute requires that all instructions shall be in writing. Such statutes are mandatory, and, where such is the law, the giving of oral instructions by the court constitutes reversible error. 2 Thomp. Trials, sec. 2375. It results from this that a statement of the law by the counsel in the case in their argument to the jury, outside of the instruction of the court, is not to be commended in any case ; because even if the law stated is good law, and meets with the tacit sanction of the court, it is equivalent to an oral instruction ; while, if it is bad law and uttered in the hearing and with the implied sanction of the court, it necessarily misleads the jury. Nor, on the other hand, would that mode of conveying the law to the jury give to appellate
That the jury may disregard the entire evidence of a witness, who swears wilfully falsely to any material fact of the ease, and may be so instructed, has been frequently decided in this state ; but such instructions ought to be carefully guarded in their wording, and should not be given unless the facts of the case clearly warrant it. Evans v. Railroad, 16 Mo. App. 522 ; Blitt v. Heinrich 33 Mo. App. 243. The facts of this case would have clearly warranted such an instruction, if asked. While we, therefore, do not feel justified in reversing the cause for these remarks made by counsel during the argument alone, we disapprove of that conduct, and will add that statements of the law by counsel to the jury, wholly outside of the instructions of the court, are in any case made at the peril of endangering a verdict thus obtained.
The judgment will be affirmed.