108 Mo. App. 353 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1904
— In April, 1902, the Mercantile Trust Company and Mississippi Valley Trust Company were severally seeking the control of the Wiggins Ferry Company, and by their competitive purchases the value of the stock had been greatly advanced, and as the contest for acquisition of a majority of the stock progressed between these rival financial institutions, which succeeding events disclosed were in truth the aggressive representatives of powerful railroad organizations, the stock remaining undisposed of and subject to purchase was lessened by acquisitions of the contending interests and its ownership became more important to each as decisive of the control of the corporation, and extravagant and widely varying high prices were paid to and obtained by those stockholders who had not sold or committed themselves to sale by prior agreement. Charles Mulliken, residing in the State of Virginia, was at such period owner of 107 shares, and plaintiff Knapp, his maternal uncle, was his regular business agent in St. Louis who handled
Plaintiff’s petition declared upon an agreement of plaintiff and defendant with Mnlliken, whereby the latter agreed to pay plaintiff and defendant for their services in course of rendition and to be rendered by them for him in the proposed sale of his 107 shares of stock of the Ferry Company, one-half of whatever he should sell his stock for, exceeding the sum of $800 per share, and an agreement between plaintiff and defendant to perform such services and to divide equally between themselves all compensation Mnlliken should pay therefor; the petition continuing, charged that plaintiff and defendant performed the services, that the stock was sold for $900 per share, Mnlliken receiving $96,300 for his 107 shares, and plaintiff and defendant became entitled to receive from Mnlliken the sum of $5350 of which plaintiff and defendant were each entitled to receive one-half, that is, $2,675 each; that Mnlliken had paid the whole amount to defendant, who had failed and refused to pay plaintiff his share, for which judgment was asked.
In his defense, defendant pleaded a general denial and at close of plaintiff’s testimony, of which the foregoing narrative is a condensed but substantial recital, the court gave an instruction, tendered by de
The rule has been' reiterated with frequency in this State, that a demurrer to the evidence admits all facts the evidence tends to prove and in passing upon it, the court is required to indulge in every inference of fact in favor of the party introducing the evidence, which a jury might deduce in his favor, with any degree of. propriety and reasonableness and when there is any substantial evidence, though slight, whether direct or inferential, tending to establish the matters in issue or any evidence from which the ultimate facts may rationally be inferred, it is incumbent on the court to submit such issue to the jury, leaving the jury to determine-the credibility of the witnesses and the weight and sufficiency of the proof submitted; where, on the other hand, the evidence furnishes no substantial' support of the allegations of plaintiff’s petition, nothing remains for submission to' the jury and the case is properly the subject of direction to the jury to find for defendant. Rice v. Sally, 176 Mo. 107, 75 S. W. 398; Hyde v. Railway, 110 Mo. 272, 19 S. W. 483; Charles v. Patch, 87 Mo. 450; Mosby v. McKee, 91 Mo. App. 500. The converse or corollary of this rule, that .where the evidence is of such character., that in event of a finding for plaintiff in any given case under the evidence, the trial judge would be compelled to set aside the verdict as without being supported by the evidence, has been as répeatedly announced. Hite v. Railway, 130 Mo. 132; Asphalt Co. v. Transit Co., 102 Mo. App. 469. The evidence in this proceeding as far as developed by plaintiff, established beyond dispute that Hanley, apprised of the agency of appellant and the general authority in Mulliken’s business affairs, usually exercised by ánd conferred on Knapp, invited the latter to permit him to co-operate with appellant
Judgment reversed and cause • remanded.