145 Mo. 614 | Mo. | 1898
This is an appeal from a decree of the Macon circuit court enforcing the specific performance
A jury was impaneled to try “the single issue whether in the lifetime of David B. Harris he contracted to sell and convey said twenty acres of land to the plaintiff, Sarah J. Hall, for services rendered and to be rendered by her,, and whether she had performed said services and performed the conditions on her part,” which issue the said jury found in favor of the plaintiffs. The verdict of the jury was approved by the chancellor and a decree rendered enforcing said contract against defendants who are the devisees of said David B. Harris. In due time the following motion for new trial was filed, heard and overruled:
“Now comes the defendants in the above entitled cause and moves the court to grant a new trial for the following reasons:
“1st. The court erred in permitting any evidence on the part of the plaintiffs on their petition over objections of the defendants.
“2nd. The court erred in admitting improper evidence on the part of the plaintiff over the objection of defendants.
“3rd. The court erred in submitting the case to be tried by a jury.
“4th. The court erred in not submitting definite issues to be tried by the jury.
“5th. The court erred in his instructions given on the part of the plaintiff.
*619 “6th. The verdict is against the law governing the case.
“7th. The verdict is against the evidence in the case.
“8th. The verdict is against the weight of evidence in the case.
“Eor these causes the plaintiffs ask that a new trial be granted in the above entitled case.”
Respondents insist that no case is made for review, because the motion for new trial makes no complaint whatever of the finding of facts by the circuit court, or the sufficiency of the evidence on which the decree is founded, but is confined entirely to the action of the jury. The essential underlying principle of appellate procedure is that it revises and corrects the proceedings of an inferior, or subordinate, court or tribunal, in a cause or matter already heard and acted upon, and among the well established rules of appellate practice in civil cases is that which asserts that only those errors to which the attention of the court of original jurisdiction was called in a motion for new trial or rehearing will be reviewed by the appellate court, unless such errors appear upon the record proper. Ross v. Railroad, 141 Mo. 390; Haynes v. Trenton, 108 Mo. 123. This rule is emphasized in Missouri by .statutory enactment. Section 2302, Revised Statutes 1889, expressly provides that “no exceptions shall be taken in an appeal or writ of error to any proceedings in the circuit court, except such as shall have been expressly decided by such court.” With these guides before us let us determine what there is to review. The sixth, seventh and eighth grounds of the motion assail the verdict of the jury. If the verdict in this case constituted the basis of the decree these objections might avail, but the verdict of a jury in a chancery case under our practice is merely advisory. It
No objection was made to the action of the court in submitting the issue to a jury nor to the form of the issues, and for that reason alone these assignments might be ignored, but as it was entirely discretionary with the court, there was no error in its action in this regard.
As to the objection that the court erred in admitting improper evidence, it is sufficient to say that in the very full brief of counsel for appellants not a single item of incompetent evidence is noted. The whole burden of the brief is as to the insufficiency of the evidence collectively to sustain the averments of the petition.
We are then brought to the remaining ground, to wit, that-the court erred in admitting any testimony whatever, under the petition. The material averments of the petition are, “That about the month of June, and along prior thereto, the plaintiffs were living to themselves in a house of their own, when the said David B.
It would seem that little doubt can exist that the petition states a clear equity. Contracts of this character have often been specifically enforced by courts
The devisees hold by the voluntary gift of Mr. Harris with full notice of Mrs. Hall’s claims, and no obstacle exists why she may not have a specific performance against them as fully as against her father who devised them the land. Both the jury and the trial court found the issue for plaintiff. As already said the circuit court was not asked to review its own finding of facts, and its decree was not challenged upon the ground of insufficiency of proofs to sustain it.
Justice to that court and to litigants demand that we should firmly adhere to the rule that in these matters of exception the trial court should have an opportunity to correct its own errors and save litigants needless expense of appealing. Having considered the record very carefully we feel constrained to affirm the decree of the circuit court and it is so ordered.