24 Mo. 596 | Mo. | 1857
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff states in his petition that defendant and himself jointly leased of Hunter and Burrows a certain lot in the city of St. Louis, which he describes in his petition : and that defendant collected the rents, one-half of which were due plaintiff;
The plaintiff replied denying the justice and correctness of the defendant’s set-off. At the trial the plaintiff offered a lease from John Biddle to Thomas Hunter, and an assignment or sale of the lease by Hunter to the plaintiff and defendant. The lease may be for part of the same lot described in plaintiff’s petition. The lot mentioned in the lease is said to be thirty-two feet seven inches front on Sixth street. The lot in the petition is stated to be thirty-seven and a half feet front on Sixth street; the other boundaries agree.
The defendant objected to the lease and also to the assignment being given in evidence. The court permitted the lease to be read to the jury, but sustained the objection to the assignment, and excluded it upon the ground that said assignment was not relevant to any issue in the case. The court then informed the plaintiff’s counsel that he was at liberty amend his petition so as to correspond with the proof offered, to-wit, the assignment of said lease, which he refused to do, but excepted to the ruling of the court in excluding said testimony.
The plaintiff then introduced Mr. Hunter as a witness, and ashed him if he and one Burrows did not lease the property,
According to the plaintiff’s own statement, ho should have amended his petition. He averred that he and defendant jointly leased a lot of ground, and that defendant had received rent for the lot, half which belonged to plaintiff. The defendant denied this statement. The proof showed that the plaintiff' and defendant had jointly bought a lease of a lot of ground; had not leased it, but had bought the lease or term of Hunter. Here was a variance. In Beck v. Ferrara, 19 Mo. 30, the petition stated that defendant was indebted to plaintiff for stall No. 20 in the North Market, which was purchased by the plaintiff from a third party for defendant at his special instance and request. The proof was that the plaintiff bought the stall for himself and afterwards sold it to defendant. This was held to be an entire failure of proof of the cause of action alleged in the petition, and not a mere variance. Now in the case before us the plaintiff has misdescribed his title. He attempts to set forth his title, and by that title to show his right to demand so