23 Mo. 432 | Mo. | 1856
delivered the opinion of the court.
The substance of the allegations in this petition are that the plaintiff and Johnston were indebted to Casey, who had sued them in the Washington Circuit Court, and that at the return term of the writ, Frissell, who was counsel for both Casey and Johnston, together with Johnston and his counsel Pipkin, promised him that the cause should be continued until the succeeding term, and afterwards, in his absence, took a judgment against him at the same term, and sued out execution thereon to a distant county, and that he was thereby put to great trouble and expense in procuring money to pay the debt and save his property from execution. It is not alleged that the plaintiff was deprived of any defence he had to the suit, or indeed that he had any defence to make, nor but that it was a just judgment against him; but the ground of complaint is, that these defendants voluntarily promised him another term’s delay in the collection of the debt, and afterwards violated their promise, by which he was deprived of the advantage he would have enjoyed had they kept their word.
We have nothing to do with the moral propriety of the defendant’s conduct, but certainly these facts do not subject them to any legal liability to the plaintiff. The petition, it is true, charges that the defendants conspired together to injure him, and did the acts complained of to carry out their evil design. The gist of the action however is, not the conspiracy, for that need not be proved, but the alleged unlawful acts done pursuant to it, and the damage that resulted therefrom to the