143 Mo. App. 714 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1910
The petition in this case is in two counts. In the first it is alleged that on various dates between July 5, 1906, and the 25th day of the same month, the firm of Enright Brothers & Company sold and delivered to defendant, at his instance and request, 489% cubic yards of crushed stone, at the agreed price of eighty-five cents per cubic yard, amounting in all to $416.08; that the account became due and payable the first day of the following month; that for value En-right Brothers & Company sold and assigned the account to plaintiff and that plaintiff demanded payment of defendant, but the demand was refused. The second count alleges that between July 27, 1906, and August 2d of the same year, H. S. Goodrich and Claude Hard-wire, partners doing business under the name of Goodrich & Company, sold and delivered 749 cubic yards of crushed stone to defendant at various dates at the agreed price of eighty-five cents per cubic yard, amounting in all to $686.65; that the account became due August 2, 1906; that for value Goodrich & Company assigned it to plaintiff and that plaintiff fruitlessly demanded payment of defendant.
During the trial, plaintiff, by leave of court, amended each count by striking out the allegation that the price charged for the stone was an “agreed price” and substituting therefor the allegation that the stone was delivered “at the price of eighty-five cents per cubic yard, being the reasonable value thereof.”
In his answer, defendant admits that he received the stone mentioned in each count, but alleges that it was delivered pursuant to a contract he had with the En-rights by which defendant was to pay seventy cents per cubic yard instead of eighty-five cents as alleged in the petition. Payments are alleged on the account sued on in the first count which overpaid the account to the amount of sixty-five dollars, and defendant prays judgment for this amount. As to the second count, defendant alleges he was still dealing with the Enrights and
Plaintiff thinks the court erred in not giving judgment for him on the first count for the full amount demanded, but since he did not appeal, we shall not discuss the question of whether or not he is right in this view. The real controversy now is whether the court erred in assessing the value of the stone sued for in the second count at eighty-five cents per cubic yard instead of seventy cents, the value defendant contends was placed on it in the contract of the parties to the transaction. The court allowed plaintiff only seventy cents per cubic yard for the stone mentioned in the first count, and disposed of the counterclaim in a way so obviously just that, as we said, the only issues for us to discuss are those relating to the second count.
According to the court’s findings of fact, defendant, a contractor, had a contract with T. J. Enright who,., under the name of Enright Brothers & Company, operated a rock crusher at Birmingham. Under the terms of this contract, defendant was buying crushed stone at seventy cents per cubic yard. Sometime before July 1, 1906, defendant agreed to pay Enright eighty-five cents per cubic yard on condition that Enright should furnish defendant an average of one hundred and fifty cubic yards per day; otherwise the price should remain at seventy cents. Enright and his successors fell short of furnishing the quantity necessary to entitle him to receive the larger price but he billed the stone delivered
The judgment is affirmed.