103 Mo. App. 198 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1903
— The petition alleges that the plaintiff and defendants are business corporations and that about March 1,1901, they entered into a verbal contract by which it was agreed that if the former would procure and cause to be erected and equipped a theater at a certain place in Kansas City, of a certain size and -style of architecture, to cost not less than the amount therein specified, the plans and specifications to be made by certain architects, and pay and' settle a certain matter in dispute between the latter and the Coates Opera House Company, that is to say, the sum of five hundred dollars, and procure' the release of such latter from a certain lease of the said opera house, then such latter would lease said theater for the term of ten years at a yearly rent of twelve thousand dollars. It was further alleged that in pursuance of the contract that plaintiff paid the five hundred dollars and procured the said release, and further that it duly performed certain of the other undertakings specified in the contract, and in doing so expended one hundred dollars more, making in all six hundred dollars. It was further alleged that the defendants, with full knowledge of the expenditures made by plaintiff- under said contract, without cause or excuse, wholly repudiated and abandoned said contract and refused to return to plaintiff the said several amounts of money so expended by it, although requested so to do, etc. The answer was a general denial with which was coupled the defense of the statute of frauds, and that of ultra vires. There was a trial to a jury resulting in a judgment for plaintiff, and defendants appealed.
The decisive issue in the case was whether the plain
But it is contended that even if the contract was entered into and performed by plaintiff, as in its petition alleged, that no cause of action can be based thereon. The action is not that to recover damages for a breach of the contract, but rather to recover for a breach of the implied promise of defendants to return to plaintiff the money which it had expended in carrying out the contract up to the time of the repudiation. No cause of action lies for non-performance of the contract. From the facts stated the law will imply a promise which, though relating partly to the same subject-matter, is a distinct promise from that agreement covered by the statute of frauds. The contract here pleaded is doubtless non-enforcible if either party chooses to refuse performance, but this fact does not avail to do away with what has been done under it. And so it is that where a party resisting performance has received benefit, or if money has been paid, or work done for him, his subsequent repudiation does not do away with these facts, but a recovery may be had on the basis of what has been done. Parker v. Niggeman, 6 Mo. App. 546; Gray v. Gray, 2 J. J. Marshall (Ky.) 21; Hawley v. Moody, 24 Vt. 606; Kidder v. Hunt, 1 Pick. l. c. 331; Greer v. Greer, 18 Me. 16. And this principle has been applied in actions on various kinds of contracts. Robinson v. Siple, 129 Mo. 208; Wiggins v. Railroad, 73 Mo. 389; Jarrett v. Morton, 44 Mo. 275; Treacy & Wilson v. Chinn, 79 Mo. App. 652.
The facts stated in the petition and proved at the trial constituted a good cause of action. As this ac
No error prejudicial to the defendants on the merits is discovered in the action of the trial court in admitting or rejecting evidence or in the giving or refusing of instructions.- The judgment, which is, as we think, clearly for the right party, must be. affirmed.