— This law action was commenced October 23, 1961. It was tried in February 1963 and defendant filed timely notice of appeal. The printed record was not filed until January 29, 1965, largely because of the inexcusable neglect and delay of plaintiffs-appellees’ counsel in filing in the trial court amendments to appellant’s typewritten abstract as provided by rule 340(c), Rules of Civil Procedure.
Appellees’ brief was not filed until the day before the appeal was submitted. It consists of only five pages, cites no *1163 authorities, and is virtually no help to the court. Of course such conduct cannot be approved.
William McDannel and his wife Leota brought the action to recover the amount of a bank check for $8947.50 made and delivered to them by defendant Parkview Investment Corporation. The check was given as the purchase price of plaintiffs’ variety store in Altoona. Defendant stopped payment on the check and plaintiffs never received any part of the amount thereof. Trial resulted in judgment on jury verdict for plaintiffs for the amount of the check. Defendant has appealed.
The action was also brought against the payee bank where plaintiffs presented the cheek for credit to their account and a duplicate deposit ticket was issued to them therefor. However, the trial court directed a verdict for the bank and no complaint of that ruling is made here. Plaintiffs’ petition also claimed $10,000 for damage to their credit and financial reputation as a result of stopping payment on the cheek. The trial court also refused to submit this claim to the jury and the propriety of this ruling is likewise not involved in the appeal.
Defendant assigns ten errors. As we shall point out, some of them relate to one or the other of the claims not submitted to the jury and must be deemed without prejudice to defendant in view of the withdrawal of such claims, as above explained.
I.. The first assigned error is the overruling of defendant’s motion to dismiss the petition, strike paragraph 10 of the petition as an opinion and conclusion, and require plaintiffs to state when the bank credited the amount of the check to plaintiffs’ account and when the credit wás removed.
The motion to dismiss asserts merely that the petition fails to state a cause of action against defendant. It does not allege wherein the petition is fatally defective. Motions to dismiss for failure to state a claim on which any relief can be granted “must specify wherein the pleading they attack is claimed to be insufficient.” Rule 104(d), Rules of Civil Procedure. The motion to dismiss does not comply with this requirement. Newton v. Grundy Center,
Paragraph 10 of the petition states plaintiffs believe
and
*1164
therefore, allege
the bank (which/as stated, was a: defendant).was prompted to remove the credit bf the amount of the check f-rbm their account-'by. the wrongful acts-of-defendant'-maker through its authorized agents, naming them. - Defendant -thinks-the-allegation is a mere Opinion and .conclusion -because based on. plaintiffs’ -belief. We think-the contention is' without'-merit.' Robinson v. Ferguson & Son,
.As to defendant’s - motion for more specific statement/ the petition alleges the bank credited plaintiffs’ account with the-amount of the check on September 25, 1961, the date It- bears,- and that the bank advised plaintiffs on the following day it' was - charging -their- account with this amount. This is sufficiently - specific. ■ -
-.Other allegations of the petition defendant asked to be made more specific relate to plaintiffs’ claim for damage' to their credit and reputation by stopping payment on the- cheek. As indicated, this claim was withdrawn from jury consideration and any error in overruling this part of the motion-must be-deemed without prejudice to defendant. The principle recognized in Spry v. Lamont,
II. Defendant complains it' was not permitted to: cross-examine plaintiff William McDannel as to the sale • of the store, make an-offer, of proof in question-and-answer form as to what the witness would testify, and examine plaintiff as to his knowledge of» the order to stop payment on the cheek. ' -
We have read and reread with care the entire examination of William McDannel and find no reversible error in any of these assigned respects. The trial court has considerable'discre-■ tion in determining the scope and extent of cross-examination. Spry v. Lamont,
The answer sought to be elicited by at least one of the questions to which an objection was sustained was shown at another point in the-cross-examination and it is obvious the ruling was therefore without prejudice' to defendant. .Spry v. Lamont, supra, and citations. Another objection was made and sustained after the answer was given. Plaintiffs made no motion to strike or exclude the answer. Sustaining the objection did not have the effect of striking the answer and it remained in the record. Correll v. Goodfellow,
Defendant asked and was permitted to make, 'an' offer of proof in the absence of the jury by questions put to McDannel which he answered. Plaintiffs’ counsel objected to a few of the questions, not many, and the court indicated he believed the objections were good. Most of the questions just referred to related to recitals in the existing written sale contract and the objection the instrument speaks for itself was clearly good. Richardson v. Douglas,
The questions defendant asked McDannel as to his knowledge of the order to stop payment on the cheek related to-plaintiffs’ claim for damage tó their credit and financial reputation which, as stated, was withdrawn from jury consideration. Any error in these rulings must therefore be deemed without prejudice.- See last- paragraph of Division I, supra. This also *1166 applies to defendant’s assigned error in the refusal to permit it to examine McDannel as to his financial standing, even though the claim for $10,000 damages had not been withdrawn at that point in the trial.
III. Error is assigned in the refusal to permit defendant to ask two questions on cross-examination of plaintiffs’ witness, the cashier of the drawee bank, concerning its practice and the general practice of the banking business in stopping payment on a check in some other manner than the stop-payment order made by this defendant. We find no- error in sustaining plaintiffs’ objection to these questions as immaterial and improper cross-examination.
IV. The ruling permitting plaintiffs’ counsel to ask a leading question of McDannel on redirect examination was not reversible error. 1) Defendant-appellant’s counsel did not object to the question as leading, only ground of the objection argued here. 2) Virtually the same answer was given on direct examination of this witness. 3) The question related to plaintiffs’ claim for damages to their credit and reputation which, as stated, was withdrawn.
V. The eighth assigned error is not argued and is therefore deemed waived. Eule 344(a) (4) (Third), R. C. P.; Peterson v. Davis,
VI. We think defendant’s motion for directed verdict was properly overruled. In general the motion asserted the evidence was insufficient to prove the allegations of the petition. Plaintiffs alleged they presented the check for deposit to their account in the drawee bank which issued a duplicate deposit ticket therefor, on the following day the bank advised plaintiffs it was charging their account with the amount of the credit and that this removal of credit was prompted by the “wrongful, unlawful, willful and malicious acts” of defendant, through its authorized agents, naming them. Issuance of the deposit ticket and the stop-payment order from defendant by the named officers was shown without dispute. As stated, it conclusively appeared plaintiffs never received the proceeds of the check except *1167 in tbe form of a temporary paper credit before the bank received the stop-payment order.
First ground of defendant’s motion to* direct was the claimed lack of proof of the allegation we have quoted. The court’s instructions to the jury did not mention the charge of “unlawful, willful and malicious acts” and this part of the petition was, in effect, withdrawn. The instructions stated merely that plaintiffs allege removal of the credit “was prQmpted by the wrongful act of defendant.” We think this was proper.
Defendant’s answer denied the check was issued for a good and valuable consideration and alleged plaintiffs procured it by fraud. These issues were submitted to the jury and no complaint is made of the instructions. Unless one or both of these defenses were established there was no justification for defendant’s stop-payment order and it must be deemed wrongful in the sense that it was without legal sanction. See Herminghausen v. Adams Express Co.,
Defendant’s complaint as to overruling other grounds of its motion to direct does not merit discussion.
VII. Defendant’s final assigned error is the overruling of its motion, at the close of plaintiffs’ evidence, to strike from plaintiffs’ petition allegations regarding their claim for damage to their credit and reputation. The ruling presents no reversible error. The trial court stated the motion was overruled “at this time * * * and maybe before the case is finished I could have a brief on the points involved.” As before explained, the allegations were later withdrawn and the jury was so instructed. The court’s refusal to withdraw the issues at the close of plaintiffs’ evidence was in accord with accepted practice. The motion had virtually the same effect as a motion to direct verdict as to these issues. See Christensen v. Sheldon,
We find no sufficient ground for reversal assigned and argued. — Affirmed.
