Maplegreen Realty Co. v. Mississippi Valley Trust Co.

237 Mo. 350 | Mo. | 1911

LAMM, J.

Suit in equity for accounting; issues joined by answer and reply; a reference below; a report by the referee; exceptions by defendant overruled; and judgment for plaintiff for $8,494.86. Defendant appeals.

There is a cross-appeal by plaintiff from a judgment in favor of defendant on certain items. Such cross-appeal has been briefed, as a separate appeal. It will be convenient to preserve that method of consideration here. Accordingly, it will be determined in a separate opinion.

The bill runs on the theory that plaintiff owned “a subdivision,” known as Greenwood, part in the city and part in the county of St. Louis; that defendant had a real estate department and plaintiff, desirous to sell its lots, in April, 1904, appointed defendant its agent to sell and receive payment; that defendant accepted such appointment and thereunder sold many lots and collected much money, which it had refused on demand to account for. Relief was prayed that defendant be required to furnish a statement and account of all such money, etc.; that an account be taken between plaintiff and defendant; that plaintiff have judgment for the amount so found due; and for such further relief as may be equitable and just.

An amended answer was accompanied by exhibits purporting to be an account between defendant and plaintiff on lot sales, receipts, expenses, expenditures and payments. The accounts are intricate and long, they would but cumber the opinion if set forth.

*357Shortly stated, the amended answer runs on the theory that defendant, by contract between it and one Syrett, who acted for plaintiff, for a compensation of five per cent on sales made by itself (or anyone else) of lots in said Greenwood,, agreed to permit the use of its name and facilities to advertise and actively aid said Syrett (he being the sale and collecting agent and manager of plaintiff and sole active officer in charge of its affairs), to sell said lots, he, Syrett, to retain management and control of such sales as plaintiff’s agent — - said arrangement to last for one year. Collections were made by Syrett and by defendant on sales during that period, and expenses incurred by defendant; that defendant either turned over to Syrett as agent for plaintiff or permitted him to retain the proceeds of lots, it thereby accounting to him as plaintiff’s secretary, treasurer and agent and relieving itself from liability; that Syrett (acting with the approval and authority of plaintiff) had access to defendant’s books, knew the state of the accounts by daily inspection and knew the correctness thereof and was the only officer of plaintiff with whom defendant came in contact; that' Syrett departed from St. Lords about February, 1905, and that plaintiff is estopped from requiring of defendant any further accounting of disbursements and receipts down to date (said account being appended in two exhibits); that afterwards defendant received from various purchasers of lots payments down to April 4, 1905, (shown( by another exhibit); that certain commissions were due and expenditures had been made, for which defendant was entitled to credit (the items of which appear in another exhibit), leaving a balance due defendant of $930.36.

A reply, in the nature of surcharging and falsifying said accounts, came in, which also denied new matter.

It seems Syrett was at all times secretary and treasurer of plaintiff; that he was at one time lot sales agent of plaintiff and was actively in control of its *358business affairs. While things were in this fix defendant also employed him in that branch of its real estate department having charge of sales of lots in certain subdivisions. It seems that at the time of that employment, through a contract made by him, defendant became the agent of plaintiff in and about the sale of lots in Greenwood and in making collection on lot sales — the scope of the agency being in dispute and the scope of Syrett’s agency for both his principals being also in dispute. .On mutual contentions arising from these complicated, overlapping and dual relations, the suit is prosecuted and defended. Syrett received certain moneys. There" is a disagreement whether he received them as plaintiff’s agent or as defendant’s agent. Defendant received other moneys and asks an acquittance therefor because it claims they came actually or potentially into Syrett’s hands as secretary and treasurer of plaintiff. Syrett kept or supervised defendant’s books of account concerning its transactions in Greenwood lots. He also kept plaintiff’s books. Apparently he served two masters, was unfaithful to both and became an absconding defaulter.

The question is: Where shall the loss fall?

The referee submitted to the chancellor the evidence taken .(we infer in great volume) together with his report — a document of 128 pages of print, which includes his findings of fact and conclusions predicated thereon, covering a multitude of detail, viz.: Each lot sale, the purchaser thereof, the earnest money and subsequent payments thereon, the expenditures of defendant, a resume of the pleadings, the referee’s view of the relationship of the parties litigant to each Other and to Syrett during the life of the agency, an outline of the plan adopted in lot sales for receiving payments, making deeds and bookkeeping on all sides. The fullness and perspicuity of his report bespeak for him the praise due to industry, pains and learning.

*359To that report when filed many written exceptions were made in due time. It was withdrawn on the same day and refiled on the next. To it as refiled, an array of exceptions were made, first and last, over a hundred. Those exceptions were heard by the chancellor and overruled, and judgment went in accordance with the recommendation and finding of the referee. Defendant duly excepted to overruling its exceptions.

The bill of exceptions contained the following:

“(Inasmuch as appellant accepts the referee’s findings of fact, it feels there is no occasion for abstracting any evidence excepting that which pertains to the reason for amending its answer and for asking for the return to it of the tender theretofore made and for a judgment against plaintiff.)”

(Nota bene: The testimony pertaining to the amendment of the answer and reasons for asking return of a $200 tender made by defendant to cover costs accrued and $77 admitted to be due on the state of accounts shown by the exhibits to the first answer, is not pertinent to the merits or tq any cqntrolhng issue in the case, hence will be omitted.)

The motions for a new trial and in arrest are reproduced ipsissimis verbis.

The first reads:

“Now comes the above-named defendant and moves the court to set aside the verdict rendered and the judgment and decree entered thereon in this case, and to grant it a new trial therein for the following reasons:
“1st. The verdict is against the evidence.
“2nd. The verdict is against the weight of evidence.
“3rd. The verdict is against the law under the evidence.
“4th. The verdict is against the law as declared in the declarations of law given by the referee.
*360“5th. The verdict is against the law as declared in the declarations of law given by the court.
“6th. The verdict is for the wrong party.
“7th. The court erred in admitting incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial evidence offered by the plaintiff.
“8th. The referee erred in admitting incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial evidence offered by the plaintiff.
“9th. The court erred in excluding' competent, relevant and material evidence offered by defendant.
“10th. The referee erred in excluding competent, relevant and material evidence offered by defendant.
“11th. The court erred in overruling the demurrer to the evidence offered at the close of the plaintiff’s case.
“12th. The referee erred in overruling the demurrer to the evidence offered at the close of the plaintiff’s case.
“13th. The court erred in its declarations of law.
“14th. The referee erred in his declarations of law.
“15th. The damages assessed by the court are excessive. •
“16th. The damages assessed by the referee, ■are excessive.”

The second reads:

“Now comes the defendant herein and moves the court to arrest the judgment in this cause for the reasons:
“1st. That upon the record said judgment is erroneous.
“2nd. That' the petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against defendant.
“3rd. The verdict is not responsive to the issues made by the pleadings.”

*361Learned counsel for defendant argue that the conclusions of the referee were wrong on the facts found by him; that the court erred in overruling the exceptions to his report and in entering a decree in accordance with the referee’s recommendation.*

But, even at first glance, it is apparent there is a serious question confronting us, in limine, viz.:

On the record here, are we at liberty to review the findings of the referee or the rulings of the court on the exceptions to those findings? More precisely put, if the chancellor erred in overruling defendant’s ex-, ceptions to the referee’s report, is that error (according to accepted rules of practice) here for review, absent a ground in the motion for a new trial directed to error in overruling such exceptions?

To that question, we address ourselves.

(a). The rule is that appellate courts approach the facts in an equity case by allowing to the trial chancellor (in this case his referee) the primary advantage of a personal factor, or equation, viz., the actual use of eye and ear in discerning the truth .of witnesses (eye and ear filling a prime office in that regard) and in stamping testimony with its earned and deserved percentage of weight and credit. The uppei; may well defer to the lower court in that particular. Subject to that modification, an equity ease is heard de novo on appeal. Therefore, if it can not be heard de novo in all that term implies — i. e., in very deed and truth — it should not be heard at all on appeal. Peradventure, to do nothing is wiser than to do something and not have the information, the wherewithal, to do right. A clock that stands still is right at least twice a day. A* clock that runs but lamely, may never tell the truth.

Assuming such premises, the accepted doctrine has come to be in this jurisdiction that we will not reverse a decree merely because the conclusion of the chancellor on facts found by him in his decree seems *362to be a non sequitur. Our duty on review in such case is to seek equity in the light of all the evidence and do it by rendering to every man his due. To that end the evidence must be brought here if a litigant seeks *to disturb the decree below on any question short of jurisdiction. [Pitts v. Pitts, 201 Mo. l. c. 359, et seq., and cases cited; among them, Patterson v. Patterson, 200 Mo. 335, which deals satisfactorily with the philosophy of the thing.] The mere facts found by a chancellor, absent the testimony on which those findings stand or fall, are in the nature of advice to this court. So, the findings of fact by a jury are advisory to the under court in an equity suit. So, tbe findings of a referee are of the same character and fill the same office below and here. None of them, in the absence of the testimony (which latter is essential matter in discerning the justice of a cause.) would warrant our interference with the decree so long as the court had jurisdiction of the person and subject-matter. A court of conscience may indeed speak and act but it. must hear before it does either. Now to “hear” and decide the merits of a case in equity, without the testimony, is a solecism.

Accordingly, in this case, when defendant elected to omit the testimony taken by the referee from its' bill of exceptions, it did more than its learned counsel intended to do, for it also elected by that same token to make it improper for us to review the findings of the referee or suspend, reverse or alter the decree based on such findings.

(b). A motion for a new trial, in the system now in vogue, fills a substantial and useful office in administering justice through the courts. Questions are suddenly sprung on a trial judge by versatile and ingenious counsel during the hotfoot of a trial, which he perforce must decide without taking time to consider. No mortal judge is allowed to be so incomparably recondite and ready as to know all the law all the time. If he *363know all the law some of the time, or some of the law all the time, or some of the law some of the time (thereby putting himself outside of the class of those who know none of the law none of the time), he rises to a permissible high-water mark of excellence. Accordingly, the office of a motion for a new trial is to gather together those rulings complained of as erroneous and solemnly and formally present .them, one by one, in black and white, to the judge, in order that he have a last chance to correct his own errors without the delay, expense or other hardships of an appeal. This, on the theory that even a judge is entitled to a last chance — a locus poenitentiae.

Furthermore, the office of that motion has come to be to preserve and fix errors to be reviewed in the record, to mark them for review, by another ruling on the motion itself, on which, when exception is taken and preserved, the whole matter is brought up for correction. We are not saying this is the best plan that might be devised. What we say is that it is the only plan now known to the law, and to which all litigants must conform, until the law is changed and its learning on that head is consigned to the dustheap. Accordingly, it is the settled doctrine of the law that a litigant heading up to a court of review, on matter of mere exception, might as well take no step at all as to omit to take the last and vital step of filing a motion for a new trial, or, if he file one, not to file a good one.

In framing issues here or below the law delighteth in reasonable precision. Accordingly, it applies the maxims: To speak insufficiently is the same as to say nothing. (Idem est nihil dicere, etc.) Not to exist and not to appear are the same thing. (Idem est non esse et non apparere.)

That the record should appear upon which the determination of the appeal might proceed understandingly, we have set forth the motions in arrest and for *364a new trial. The office of a motion in arrest is not to strike at matter of mere exception. That is the office of a motion for a new trial. In the present case that line of de nareation is preserved by the movent, and, as the matter in hand pertains to exceptions, we may pnt to one side the motion in arrest.

Attending to the motion for a new trial, it would be a most strained and unnatural construction on its language to find therein any reference whatever to exceptions to the report of the referee or any complaint based on error in overruling those exceptions. The language of that motion fell from learned attorneys. They must be held to use words with precision and mean what they say-" — not what they do not say. When they use words well known to jurisprudence and well understood as filling certain offices, we are not permitted to give those words a loose, colloquial meaning, but define them secundum artem. In that motion they deal with “verdicts,” the admission and exclusion of “evidence,” “demurrers,” “declarations of law” and “damages” — each of these terms have a well defined meaning in law. They complain therein of the rulings of the court and referee with regard to those matters, but nowhere do they complain of the ruling of the court upon the exceptions to the referee’s report. It matters not that there are no “verdicts” or “declarations of law” in equity suits, and there are none here that we can find. Nor are there any “demurrers” in this record. The argument runs this way: As there is nothing to which those complaints can apply, therefore, they should be given some vitality and held to apply to the exceptions to the referee’s report and to the action of the court in overruling them. But we decline to follow the lead of that argument. It would lead to dangerous and unheard of results, and play havoc with all certainty and precision of construction.

*365In this condition of things, although counsel may not have intended to waive those exceptions or waive their complaint of the court in overruling them, yet they do that very thing by pretermitting all reference thereto in the motion for a new trial.

We have so lately been over this matter in State ex rel. v. Woods, 234 Mo. 16, that further exposition is out of place. Other authorities will appear in plaintiff’s brief, which the inquiring mind may consult.

On the authority of the Woods case, we affirm the judgment on defendant’s appeal.

This case coming into Banc and being reheard the divisional opinion of Lamm, J., is adopted.

All concur, except Valliant, C. J., who dissents in a separate opinion filed, in which Woodson, J., concurs in result.
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