48 Mo. App. 203 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1892
The main controversy in this cause arises as to the sufficiency of the various counts of the plaintiff’s petition. The petition contains sixty-four counts, of which, under a stipulation between the parties, only the three first are set out in the record, they together with the matter set out in the bill of exceptions being deemed sufficient for the purposes of a review of the cause on appeal.
“That thereafter plaintiff demanded of said railway company payment of said order, and payment thereof was refused, of which refusal of payment plaintiff immediately notified defendants. -That the amount of said order is now due plaintiff from defendant ; that plaintiff has demanded the same, and defendant refused and still refuses to pay the same.
“Wherefore plaintiff asks judgment for the sum of $20, the amount of said order and indebtedness so transferred to him, as aforesaid, by said W. A. Barnes, together with interest and costs.
“Second. And for another and further cause of action, plaintiff states that defendant, being a copartnership doing business under the firm-name and style of Randall & Co., and being engaged in the construction and building of the grade and roadbed of the Cape Girardeau Southwestern Railway Company, as contractors, in the years 1888 and 1889, as aforesaid, during the months of January and February, 1889, employed John Cook and his team to work and labor
“Plaintiff says that after said time check was issued, certified, signed and delivered to the said John Cook by defendants, as aforesaid, he, the said John Cook, transferred the said time check and indebtedness to this plaintiff; for value. That the same is now due plaintiff; that plaintiff has demanded and defendants refused to pay him; wherefore plaintiff asks judgment for the sum of $68.05, the amount of said time check and indebtedness so transfeired to him, as aforesaid, and for interest and costs.
“ Third. And for another and further cause of action, plaintiff states that. defendant, being a copartnership doing business under the firm-name and style'of Randall & Co., and being engaged in the construction and building of the grade and roadbed of the Cape Girardeau Southwestern Railway Company, as contractors, in the years 1888 and 1889, as aforesaid, during the month of February, 1889, employed Thomas Wilson to work and labor by the day on said roadbed and grade, and that said Wilson did work under said employment five days at the price of $1.50 per day, and for such work and labor so rendered defendants became indebted to said Thomas Wilson in the sum of $7.50; that said Thomas Wilson received on said work and labor the sum of $3.45 ; that the balance due said Thomas Wilson on February 13, 1889, was $4.05, as shown by said time check certified to said railway company in favor of said Thomas Wilson signed by defendants, and dated February 13, 1889, for a balance of $4.05, which said time check is herewith filed.
The answer to each of the counts was a general denial. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff on each of them, and the court entered judgment in his favor for the aggregate of the jury’s finding. The •defendant filed motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment, which were overruled. He appeals, and assigns for error the admission of any evidence under the petition and the admission of incompetent evidence for the plaintiff, and that the verdict on the third count is excessive, as shown by the record.
It is the settled law of this state that, when the petition fails to state any cause of action, the defendant may demur to it orally by objecting to the introduction of any evidence in its support, or by motion in •arrest. Andrews v. Lynch, 27 Mo. 167. The rule on that subject is that matters informally stated are aided by verdict, but the omission of essential averments •cannot be thus supplied, unless the petition contains terms sufficiently general to comprehend them by fair and reasonable intendment. Frazer v. Roberts, 32 Mo. 457; Clinton v. Williams, 53 Mo. 141; International Bank v. Franklin, 65 Mo. 110. As Judge Black aptly says in Young v. Iron Co., 103 Mo. 327, “the question of the sufficiency of the petition is one thing ■where raised by a demurrer, but another thing when
In the case at bar the answer was a general denial. When the plaintiff proceeded to offer evidence under the various counts of his petition, the defendants orally ■demurred to the petition by objecting to the introduction of any evidence in support of these counts. These ■objections were overruled, and this ruling constitutes the main error complained of.
The objection to the first count, now urged is that it ■declares upon a bill of exchange, and shows no diligence in its presentation, nor does it state an assignment of the bill to plaintiff in proper terms. This count is inartificially drawn, as it does not clearly appear whether the plaintiff intends to sue upon the assigned order, or upon the transferred indebtedness, but it states clearly facts sufficient to justify a recovery on the latter theory. It states that the indebtedness was transferred to the plaintiff, and, as such transfer may be shown by oral evidence, it was unnecessary to aver a written assignment. Smith v. Sterritt, 24 Mo. 260, 262; Boyer Hamilton, 21 Mo. App. 520, 524.
The second and third counts purport to be drawn upon transferred accounts, and contain sufficient allegations to show an indebtedness from the defendants to the plaintiff’s assignor, and the transfer of such claims to the plaintiff; hence, the objection to them is clearly untenable.
The objection made to the competency of the evidence admitted for plaintiff is likewise untenable. The plaintiff offered in evidence the order executed by the defendants and the time checks signed by them, as evidencing the amounts of the indebtedness sued for in the respective counts. As these constituted written
The third count is based upon an item of $4.05. The jury rendered a verdict for plaintiff on that count for $13.10. The plaintiff concedes that, to that extent, the record shows error, and now offers to remit the sum of $9.05 from the amount of the judgment. Such remittitur will be entered, and the judgment affirmed for the residue. The costs of the appeal are taxed against the respondent.