44 Mo. App. 411 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1891
The plaintiffs, who are builders, entered into a written contract with the defendant’s intestate, whereby they agreed to erect for him certain buildings for a stated consideration. The contract contained the following clause: “And after the completion of the work according to contract, if payment of the amount due from the party of the first part to the party of the second part be not made within ten days after demand for same, then, in case said parties of the second part shall have recourse to legal process to collect said amount from said first party, there shall be allowed by the court trying said cause a reasonable attorney’s fee in favor of the second parties.”
The defendant, appealing, contends that there can be no recovery in this case under the conceded facts, because the plaintiffs’ cause of action under their contract was entire, and they could not split it up into fragments ; hence judgment and satisfaction in the first action are a complete bar to the present proceeding. To this the plantiffs reply that they did not sue upon the contract, but upon a quantum valebat in the first action, and, therefore, their right to counsel fees neither was nor could be tried therein, and, furthermore, that their right of recovery of counsel fees was not complete until the termination of the first action.
It was held in Mansur v. Botts, 80 Mo, 651, that, where a special contract has been fully executed and nothing remains to be done but to pay the stipulated sum to be due thereon, indebitatus assumpsit will lie to recover the same. We expressed our opinion in regard to this ruling in Floerke v. Distilling Co., 20 Mo. App. 76, and Crump v. Rebstock, 20 Mo. App. 37, but followed it in those cases in conformity with our duty under the constitution. In regard to building contracts it was always the law of this state that a party might sue for the reasonable value of the work and material, though done and furnished under special
In applying the law, as hereinabove stated, to the record before us, but two theories are conceivable. Either the plaintiffs brought their first action on the theory that they had fully performed their contract, but were entitled and elected to sue in assumpsit for the recovery of the balance due, in which event it was their duty to include their entire claim in one action ; or else they sued on the theory, that they had not performed the contract, yet, as builders, they were entitled to recover the reasonable value of their work, subject to the owner’s counterclaim, in which event they had no claim for counsel fees, because these were due only in the event of “a completion of the work according to contract.”
Is is a well-settled principle that an entire claim cannot be split up and made the subject of several suits. Green v. Von der Ahe, 36 Mo. App. 394. The form of action pursued is immaterial. Moran v. Plankinton, 64 Mo. 337 ; Union Ry. & Trans. Co. v. Traube, 59 Mo. 355. The breach of the express contract by the decedent gave the plaintiffs but one cause of action, and, if that cause of action was complete when they instituted their first action, a recovery in that action is necessarily a bar to all further proceedings. Hence, the only
The defendant at the close of plaintiffs’ case asked .an instruction that the plaintiffs could not recover. At the close of the entire evidence she asked an instruction that, if the court found from the facts as they appear toy the uncontroverted evidence, the plaintiffs could not recover. These instructions ought to have been given. Under the conceded facts the judgment in plaintiffs’ first proceeding is a complete bar to this action. All the judges concurring, the judgment is reversed.