125 Mo. App. 47 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1907
In April, 1902, as representative of competing railroad companies for the control of the Wiggins Ferry Company, the Mercantile Trust Company and the Mississippi Valley Trust Company of St. Louis sent the stock of the Wiggins Ferry Company skyward, Charles Mullikin, a resident of the State of Virginia, owned one hundred and seven shares of the Wiggins Ferry Stock. For this stock he was wired an offer by the president of the Wiggins Ferry Company. On April 27, the plaintiff, who is his maternal uncle and at the time was his St. Louis business agent, wired him not to accept any offer for his stock but to take the first train for St. Louis. Mullikin arrived in St. Louis about-noon, April 29. Hanley was acquainted with Mrs. Whittemore, a resident of St. Louis, mother of Mullikin and sister of Knapp. Hanley had done some business for Mrs. Whittemore and learning from her that a sale of some - of her stock in the Wiggins Ferry Company had been negotiated by her brother to the Mississippi Valley Trust Company and that her other shares would probably be sold to said company, and also that her son Mullikin was on his way to St. Louis for the purpose of selling his stock, Hanley conceived the idea of offering the stocks of both for sale in one block, for the purpose of getting a better price, and having been informed by Mrs. Whittemore that plaintiff was Mullikin’s agent, on April 28, procured an introduction to the plaintiff with whom he was not theretofore acquainted, and informed him that he “had means of obtaining inside figures about what the stock was doing,” and asked plaintiff’s per
On a former trial of the cause, plaintiff was non-suited and appealed to this court, where we held the plaintiff made out a prima-facie case, and reversed and remanded the cause. [104 Mo. App. 353.] After the case was remanded, plaintiff amended his petition, wherein he alleged in substance that Mullikin agreed with plaintiff and defendant, in consideration of services rendered and to be rendered in and about the sale of his one hundred and seven shares of stock, to pay them for the services one-half of whatever he should receive on the sale of such stock over and above $800 per share; that plaintiff and defendant, as agents of Mullikin, sold the stock
For the plaintiff, the court gave the following instructions :
“1. The court instructs the jury that in determining whether or not Charles Mullikin employed plaintiff and defendant jointly to attend to the sale of the stock mentioned in evidence, the jury will consider all the facts and circumstances in evidence in the case as to whether the parties so intended at the time, that is to say, whether they by word or act gave each other so to understand, and if from all the facts and circumstances in the case the jury find and believe from the evidence that Mullikin, Knapp and Hanley, did give each, other by word or act to so understand, and the plaintiff and defendant so attended to said sale and rendered such service to Mullikin concerning the same, and that defendant received the whole compensation therefor from said Mullikin, and has not paid to plaintiff any part thereof, then the jnry will find for plaintiff.
“2. The jury are instructed that if they find and believe from the evidence that plaintiff and defendant undertook to perform the services mentioned in the petition for Charles Mullikin under joint employment from him, and acting together, performed the services, and that
“3. The court instructs the jury that in order to establish the agreement ‘that plaintiff and defendant agreed to perform said services and to divide equally between themselves all such compensation as said Mullikin should pay therefor,’ it is not necessary that plaintiff should prove in the trial that such agreement was in words actually expressed between plaintiff and defendant, but it is sufficient for the jury to find and believe from all the facts and circumstances in the case, that the parties acted and conducted themselves towards one another in the carrying out of the matter in such way as to lead each other to believe that they so intended at the time.”
And for the defendant, the following:
“1. The court instructs the jury that in order for the plaintiff to recover, he must establish by the preponderance or greater- weight of the testimony that the person referred to in the testimony as Mullikin, employed the plaintiff and defendant to act jointly as his agents in and about the sale of certain stock owned by him and mentioned in the testimony and to pay them one-half of all realized over and above $800 per share for said stock and that it was' understood and agreed between plaintiff and defendant prior to the sale of said stock that they should divide said one-half of such excess between themselves and unless he has done so, plaintiff cannot recover and your verdict must be for the defendant.
“2. The court further instructs you that if you find and believe from the evidence that there was no agreement express or implied as defined in other instructions
“3. The court instructs the jury that before the plaintiff can recover in this action you must find and believe from the preponderance or greater weight of the evidence that in the sale of the stock referred to in the testimony the defendant and plaintiff acted in conjunction and that the defendant received a sum of money from one Mullikin, mentioned in the testimony and that it was understood, between defendant and said Mullikin that said sum of money was paid defendant as compensation for the services of both plaintiff and defendant in and about such sale at the time Mullikin paid defendant, if you so find, and unless you so find, the plaintiff cannot recover and your verdict must be for the defendant.”
Plaintiff asked sis other instructions which the court refused; one on the measure of-plaintiff’s damages which should have been given. The substance of the other five are comprehended- in the fourth one, which reads as follows:
“If the jury find and believe from evidence that at the request or by the authority of Charles Mullikin plaintiff and defendant rendered services for Mullikin in and about the sale of the stock mentioned in the petition; and that it was understood between them at the time that the compensation to be paid by Charles Mullikin there
“If plaintiff and defendant rendered such services and if there was such an understanding at the time, then the court instructs the jury that the same constitutes the agreement alleged in the petition. Concerning such alleged agreement the court instructs you that it is not necessary if it was made, that it should have been made in writing, or in express words, but the jury may infer the same from all the facts and circumstances of the case, which is for the jury to consider.
“If the jury find and believe from the evidence that such services were rendered by plaintiff and defendant and that the same was so rendered with the understanding- or agreement aforesaid (if there was such understanding or agreement) and that the whole compensation therefor was paid by Mullikin to said defendant for' himself and plaintiff and was so received then the court instructs the jury that in the absence of any understanding p> the contrary, the jury will presume that it was the intention of the parties at the time, that said compensation was to be equally divided between plaintiff and defendant.”
This instruction might be somewhat confusing to the ordinary jury. It aimed to and does, in a way, submit to the jury to find the essential facts relied upon by plaintiff for a recovery, which are; first, that plaintiff and defendant were jointly employed by Mullikin as agents to séll his stock; second, that the secret agreement made by Hanley and Mullikin for compensation, inured
Defendant’s instructions are open to the same criticism. In the abstract, they are perhaps correct, but as they read, they are misleading and in the absence of proper instructions for plaintiff, to which they are supposed to- refer, cut the plaintiff’s case up by the roots. We do not think it is at all probable that the jury, from the instructions given, got anything like a clear conception of the law of the case. In fact, the case is a difficult one to instruct, so that an ordinary jury may comprehend it. But the instructions given as well as those refused, which should have been given,‘can undoubtedly be improved and made more intelligible to a jury. We think no error Avas committed by the court in sustaining the motion for new trial, and affirm the judgment.