Link v. Prufrock

85 Mo. App. 618 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1900

BLAND, P. J.

— On March 18, 1895, plaintiff filed before a justice of the peace in the city of St. Louis the following account for suit, to-wit:

“Theodore C. Link, Architect, Equitable Building,

St. Louis, Mo., March 1, 1895.

Messrs. Westermann & Prufroek, City:

1891. To professional services; making plans and elevations of barroom for Union Station Hotel ....................'.............$150 00

Erom the justice’s court the cause was taken to the circuit cqurt by appeal, where on a trial de novo plaintiff recovered a judgment, from which defendants appealed. This judgment was reversed and the cause remanded for error appearing in the instructions given at the instance of plaintiff (80 Mo. App. 592). After the reversal and before the second trial, Westermann died, and the suit as to him was dismissed, and thereafter prosecuted against Prufroek alone. On the second trial in the circuit court plaintiff again recovered judgment; defendant appealed.

Por a reversal of the judgment the appellant again assigns as error the giving of illegal instructions on behalf of respondent.

I. The instructions in which it is insisted by appellant that error appears reads as follows:

“No. 1. The jurors are instructed that this suit was originally brought against J. P. Westermann and William Prufroek; the death of the defendant, Westermann, has been *621suggested, and the suit dismissed as to him, leaving William Prufroek the only defendant. Now, gentlemen, you are instructed that if you believe and find from the evidence that at the time in question said Westermann and Prufroek were interested in a joint business venture to lease the Terminal Hotel, including the barroom in said Terminal Hotel building, and if you further believe and find from the evidence that the plaintiff, Link, at the instance and request of said Westermann and Prufroek, or either of them, prepared certain plans and sketches for the interiorof thesaidbarroom; or if you believe and find from the evidence, without being requested so to do, the plaintiff prepared such plans or sketches for said barroom and thereafter exhibited them to said Westermann and Prufroek, who thereupon examined the same and thereupon they, or either of them, suggested that certain changes be made and requested that plaintiff complete the same, and that plaintiff, in accordance with such request, proceeded with said work until stopped by said Westermann and Prufroek, or either of them, then your verdict should be for plaintiff. On the other hand, if you do not so believe and find, or if you believe and find from the evidence that the request of Westermann and Prufroek, or either of them, if you believe and find from the evidence there was such a request that plaintiff perform said work in making said plans or sketches, was conditioned upon the obtaining a lease to said hotel and barroom, that is to say, that they desired him to do said work only in the event of their securing a lease to said premises, and if you further believe and find that they, and neither of them, ever secured a lease to either said hotel or barroom, then your verdict should be for the defendant.
“No. 2. If you find for the plaintiff, your verdict should be for such a sum as you believe and find from the evidence is the reasonable value of the work done by plaintiff for de*622fendant (not, however, for more than $150, the amount sued for), with interest at the rate of six per cent per annum from the twentieth day of March, 1891, the date of service of sumr mens in this suit to this time. If you find for the defendant, your verdict must simply so state.”

The error pointed o<ut in the first instruction is found in the second alternative clause thereof, which in effect told the jury that if Link of his own motion prepared the plans, etc., and that after their preparation Westermann and Prufrock inspected and approved them, etc., and promised to accept and pay for them, then they should find for plaintiff. The contention is that there is no evidence to support this clause of the instruction. The contention is well grounded, for the bill of exceptions fails to disclose any evidence whatever in support of the hypothesis that Link, without being first employed by Westermann and Prufrock to draw the plans, etc., did make them of his own motion. In reply to this objection to the instruction, respondent insists that this court on the former appeal found testimony in support of this theory of the case, and that the evidence on the last, is substantially the same as on the first trial in the circuit court. This feature of the evidence was not discussed or passed on on the former appeal, as will appear from the opinion found in 80 Mo. App., page 592.

TI. The case has been twice tried by a jury in the circuit court with the same result. The evidence clearly and undoubtedly preponderates in favor of the respondent, to the effect that he was employed by Westermann and Prufrock to do the architectural work, which he did, and for which he sues. He so testified, and is corroborated by four disinterested witnesses, and by all the circumstances developed on the trial. Westermann and Prufrock deny the employment, but they are uncorroborated by any witness; on the contrary, *623they are contradicted by the disinterested witnesses and by the circumstances therein surrounding the transactions in which they were then engaged and out of which the employment grew. It is manifest to us that the judgment is for the right party and should not be reversed for an epror in an instruction which we do not think misled the jury. The error was non-prejudicial and does not warrant a reversal. Whitehead v. Atchison, 136 Mo. 485; Sullivan v. Jefferson Avenue Ry. Co., 133 Mo. 1; Homuth v. Metropolitan R. R. Co., 129 Mo. 629; Jones v. Pundstone, 102 Mo. 240; Scotland Co. Nat. Bank v. O’Connel, 23 Mo. App. 165. On the whole evidence the respondent was entitled to recover. The jury could not have rightly found any other verdict than the one they did find. For this reason the error was harmless, and the judgment should be affirmed. Barkley v. Cemetrey Ass’n, 153 Mo. 300; Nelson v. Foster, 66 Mo. 381; Rowell v. St. Louis, 50 Mo. 92; Fields v. Wabash R. R. Co., 80 Mo. App. 603.

III. The error pointed out in the second instruction is that it directed the jury, if they found for plaintiff, to allow him six per cent interest per annum on the amount found due on his account from March 20, 1894, when the evidence is that no demand of payment was made, until made by the commencement of the suit March 18, 1895, and that the jury as shown by their verdict, found the full amount sued for and added six per cent interest per annum thereon from March 20, 1894. The respondent confesses the error and an excess of award of one year’s interest on $150, and suggest that the excess may be remitted here. That he may do so-, or that the court may order a remittitur, when the excess of award is readily ascertainable, is the well settled practice of the appellate courts of this state. McCullough v. Phoenix Ins. Co., 113 Mo. 606; Myers Tailoring Company v. Keeley, 58 *624Mo. App. 491. The excess of the judgment is by both paxties admitted to be $9. If, therefore, the respondent will, within ten days after the filing of this opinion, remit tibe, sum of nine dollars from the recovery, the judgment for the balance will be affirmed, otherwise the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded for retrial. It is so ordered.

All concur.