177 Mo. App. 402 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1914
The case herein considered was before the court, at the March, 1912, term, on an appeal by plaintiff from an order of the trial court refusing to set aside an involuntary nonsuit brought about by a ruling that plaintiffs’ evidence did not entitle them to go to the jury. That ruling was disapproved and the cause was reversed and remanded in order that the issues of fact therein might be submitted to a jury. [Long v. Rucker, 166 Mo. App. 572.] In accordance with that decision a trial has been had, the issues have been submitted, and the jury has returned a verdict for plaintiffs in the sum of $2738.24 actual, and $100 punitive, damages. The court rendered judgment thereon and defendants appealed.
The case is for damages for slander of title to real estate. A detailed statement of the facts need not be repeated here since they are set forth in the former opinion. However, in order that the questions involved may be easily kept in mind, it may be well to state that the defendant, Eannie H. Rucker, was the owner of a store building in Columbia and that her codefendant William H. Rucker, was her husband and her agent acting for her in the renting of said property and in the general business of looking after it. Plaintiffs held a
Saturday afternoon about three or four o’clock, after the agreement had been reached, the defendant, William H. Rucker, went to one of the plaintiffs, Clarence A. Long, and asked him about their business and this plaintiff told him they had fixed up a sale and was going to sell the business to Mr. Kistler. Rucker replied “you tell Kistler to see me before he buys the place.” Long told him he still had a lease for a year on the building. To which Rucker replied, “Well, you tell Kistler to see me,” but gave no reason why Kistler should see him.
Some time that same day (Saturday) Price saw William H. Rucker and discussed the matter with him and. asked him not to do anything that would be detrimental to the interests of plaintiffs’ creditors and Rucker promised not to do so, and. about seven o ’clock
“Q. Tell what was said then. A. Well, I had heard on Monday, through a traveling man, that Mr. Rucker was negotiating elsewhere and as reports of that kind often get out I didn’t believe it but on Tuesday when Mr. Rucker ¿ame in I told him that the creditors of Long and Son would insist upon the continuance of the Long lease and he said that they had no lease whatever', and I said, “Well, they expect to hold possession of the property under the lease” and he said that “anybody who went in there would have a fight.”
Plaintiff at this point attempted to have the witness explain what he meant in the foregoing testimony, but on objection from the defendants, this was not allowed. Price then testified:
“Q. Well, tell what he said. A. He said that any one who went in there would have a fight and as we continued the conversation of course we talked for twenty or thirty minutes and I don’t remember everything that was said but he finally wound up, after I bad stated again that they expected to hold the premises, he said ‘Well, damn them, I will show ’em,’ and
“Q. Well, was this money furnished Kistler and the deal closed? A.' No.
“Q. Tell the jury why. A. Well, after these statements from Mr. Rucker I would not—I knew that there was a lawsuit—that Mr. Rucker intended to fight possession and I was not willing to furnish the money to go in and buy a lawsuit.
“Q. Did you so report to Mr. Kistler? A. No. Mr. Kistler sent word to me; why didn’t we close'it up—my his son—and I just told him the deal was off, or something of that kind.
“Q. In that fast conversation with Mr. Rucker did he give you his reasons for his statements?
“By Mr. Corum: Let him tell what he said.
“By the court: Very well. Just state everything that was said.
“A. Well, we talked for twenty or thirty minutes and of course in a conversation of that kind a man could not remember the exact conversation, but the gist of it was that he was not going to let anybody go in there and that he wanted possession of that property and that is what I understood from his conversation.”
And on cross-examination, Price further testified:
“Q. And then he said that anybody that went in there would have a fight? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. And you understood from that language that he meant a fight in court-—a lawsuit? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. And then yon, ceased to negotiate further with Mr. Kistlerf A. Yes, sir.
“Q. You sent word to him by his son that the deal was off? ' A. Yes, sir. His son was sent to me to know why I hadn’t closed the deal.
‘‘Q. And you sent word that the deal was off? A. yes, sir.
“Q. Was that all the word that you sent Mr. Kistler? A. Yes, sir; that is all I remember.”
Plaintiffs’ cause of action is based on the charge that defendants maliciously, and without probable cause, stated to Price that “they (meaning the plaintiffs) have no lease whatever” and that “any body that goes in there (meaning into said premises) will have a fight,”,and that on being told that the plaintiffs expected to hold said premises under said lease, defendant Rucker also said to Price “Damn ’em, I will show them. ’ ’
To our minds the evidence shows very clearly that the determined and unnecessarily vitriolic attack made by Rucker on plaintiff’s leasehold title defeated the consummation of the sale to Kistler and directly resulted in loss to plaintiffs. [Long v. Rucker, 166 Mo. App. 572, l. c. 578; Paull v. Halferty, 63 Pa. St. 46; Gott v. Pulsifer, 122 Mass. 235; Andrew v. Deshler, 45 N. J. Law 167; Hopkins v. Drowne, 41 Atl. 567.] It will not do to say, as matter of law, that it was'the unpleaded act of Rucker in leasing the building late Monday afternoon that defeated the sale. Possession of the store was still in plaintiffs’ control and it was not until after Rucker’s statements and belligerent announcement that Price allowed the deal to drop. In fact, the evidence as a whole will bear the inference that the attack on plaintiffs’ title and the execution of another lease were but parts of one and the same transaction in which the warlike statement and ultimatum to Price was the more important of the two, and- produced the effect intended.
The evidence was also sufficient to go to the jury on the question of malice notwithstanding Rucker’s testimony. The jury were not compelled to believe everything he said. And they had a right to look to all the testimony to determine whether or not he acted in good faith. And since the evidence is sufficient to support an inference that the attack was not made in good faith, the verdict of the jury finding malice must be respected. There was evidence tending to show that Rucker had a motive in destroying the remaining year of the lease; he could rent the building for $100 instead of sixty-five dollars. There is evidence that he knew plaintiffs were going to sell to Kistler; that, without giving any reason, he did not want Kistler to buy until he saw him; that he would have let Nay smith buy the unexpired lease if he had bought the stock. The failure to keep the appointment with Price on Monday although he was just across the street; the subsequent going to Price, and the unusual strength of the language used to impress upon Price—the most effective point at which to strike—that he was going to fight and contest the validity of the unexpired term, although up to that time he had recognized plaintiffs as lessees; and the fact that he is contradicted by Price in a number of important particulars, and by one of the Longs in others; all these furnish sufficient grounds
But defendants argue that Price never told Rucker that he was going to lend Kistler the money to buy the stock and hence Rucker did not know he was .liable to injure plaintiffs. There is testimony showing that he did know Kistler was going to buy, and it seems he went to the only one who was in a position to prevent it.
There was no issue raised in the lower court that there was an unfair sale of the property or that plaintiffs were lacking in diligence in the sale thereof. In fact, if the sale to Kistler fell through they were helpless, since the creditors, who had waited to give plain
Objections, are made to the action of the trial court in certain rulings on evidence and in the giving of instructions. A careful examination of each discloses that they are without merit. The evidence showed the building was Mrs. Rucker’s separate property and that Mr. Rucker was her agent. It is also sufficient to support a reasonable inference that the statements were false, were uttered maliciously and resulted in pecuniary loss to plaintiffs; and that they were uttered as a part of the business of getting rid of a lease at sixty-five dollars per month in order to obtain one at $100 per month. The defendants are, therefore, under the verdict, jointly liable. [Flesh v. Lindsay, 115 Mo. 1, l. c. 19; Kellar v. James, 14 L. R. A. (New Series) 1003, l. c. 1009.]
It is disclosed by the evidence, however, that in the stock sold was a soda fountain on which there was a chattel mortgage to the makers thereof for $700. It is nowhere shown in the evidence that in the sale to Kistler for $4200, he was to assume this debt. We do not think the evidence supports an inference that he was to assmue it, nor can we look to the evidence in the other trial to ascertain that fact. Consequently, according to the evidence what plaintiffs would have really gotten out of the stock if they had been permitted to close the deal with Kistler was $3500 instead
If, therefore, plaintiffs will, within ten days from the announcement of this opinion, enter a remittitur of $700 with interest at the rate of six per cent from January 18,1913, the date of the rendition of the judgment, the cause will be affirmed, otherwise it will be reversed and remanded.