75 Mo. 89 | Mo. | 1881
Plaintiff and defendant were jointly employed as attorneys at law by Mt. Pleasant township, in Bates county, to defend Bates'county against certain suits instituted in the circuit court of the United States on bonds issued by said township to the Lexington, Lake & Gulf Railroad Company, and, by the agreement, were to receive as their compensation, $7,000, provided said suit should be successfully defended, and the bonds declared void by the Supreme Court of the United States. In one of the cases, Harshman v. Bates County, the said court did so decide, and thereupon Bassett applied to the township board of Mt. Pleasant township, and obtained an order for said $7,000, on executing a bond in the penalty of $14,000, to refund the money he might receive on said order, in the event that other cases, on other of said township bonds' should be decided by the Supreme Court of the United States adversely to the township. The case of Harshman v. Bates County was subsequently overruled by the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Winters et al. v. Bates County, which was a suit on a portion of said Mt. Pleasant township bonds, which, by this latter decision, yrere held valid, This suit was instituted by Henry.to re
The plaintiff’s fourth was to the effect, that pláintiff should not be charged yvith any fees, or costs incurred, in defending any other suit than those mentioned in the contract with Mt. Pleasant township. So far as appears in this record, the court properly refused the instruction. The contract with the township is not fully stated in the plaintiff’s petition, nor does it appear in the bill of exceptions, and how is this court to determine, whether plaintiff is liable or not for his proportion of fees and costs incurred in other cases than those specifically mentioned in that contract ?
The second for defendant declares, that if the warrant was delivered to Bassett on the condition that he was to return the money if either of the suits should be decided adversely to Bates county, and he executed a bond to secure his compliance with such condition, and other suits were yet undetermined, plaintiff” could not recover. What was said of defendant’s first instruction is equally applicable to this. Bassett received the money from the township, under the contract,-for himself and Henry, and cannot set up a possible or probable right of the township to recover it back.
The defendant’s third instruction told the jury, that before they could find for plaintiff, they must find that he entered upon the defense of said suits and performed the labor and services the contract required, and that if he failed, neglected or refused to do so, and defendant performed the services, plaintiff could not recover, unless the township assented to such failure, and defendant agreed to perform such services, if plaintiff” would pay half of the
The fourth declares, that Henry could not recover, if he performed no services under the contract with the township, or failed or neglected, or refused to pay his portion of the expenses of the litigation. Eor reasons already given, this instruction was improper.
The next instruction, number six, declares, that either a refusal, or a failure, on the part of Henry, to render services, under the contract, amounted to an abandonment of the contract on his part. His mere failure to render service, we have seen, would not amount to an abandonment. A refusal to do so might. Tt would depend, as we have seen, upon all the circumstances under which it was made. This
"We do not think that the plaintiff “ needlessly took his non-suit/' The instructions given absolutely precluded his recovery, if the jury followed them, and there was any evidence to support them, and that there was we may assume from the fact that the court gave them.
The bill of exceptions not containing the evidence, we have been no little perplexed in determining the questions involved in many of the instructions. While, ordinarily, it is unnecessary to set out all the evidence, yet in this case it is impossible, satisfactorily to determine the questions involved in the absence of the testimony. The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.