243 Mo. 205 | Mo. | 1912
The petition, after stating that the plaintiff is an attomey-at-law practicing in the city of St. Louis and elsewhere, proceeds as follows:
“That the Las Yegas and Hot Springs Electric Railway, Light and Power Company is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the Territory of New Mexico, and was, in December, 1904, engaged in operating a street railroad in the city of Las Yegas, Territory of New Mexico, with a branch line to Hot Springs in said Territory, using electricity for motive power;
“That plaintiff was the owner of three hundred and ninety-three shares of the capital stock of said corporation, said stock being of the par value of one hundied dollars per share; that he was the owner of sixty-four five per cent first mortgage gold bonds issued by said corporation, of the par value of five hundred dollars each; that in addition to the stocks and bonds so owned by plaintiff, he had an option from other holders and owners of the stock of said corporation, giving him the right to purchase at less than the par value thereof a sufficient amount of the capital stock of said corporation to give plaintiff control of more than seventeen hundred shares, out of a total of two thousand shares of stock issued by áaid
“Wherefore, plaintiffs prays judgment against the defendant in the sum of forty-eight thousand, five-hundred dollars ($48,500), together with interest and costs.”
The answer is a general denial.
The cause was tried at the October term, 1907, Division No. 3, of the St. Louis Circuit Court and was submitted to the court for trial without the intervention of a jury.
The plaintiff was sworn as a witness in his own behalf and testified that the Las Yegas and Hot Springs Electric Railway,' Light & Power Company, had an outstanding capital represented by 2000 shares of stock of the par value of $100 each, and 348 bonds each of the par value of $500. That he owned in December, 1904, 393 shares of the stock and 64 of the bonds, the most of which were pledged as collateral. The other principal stockholders were F. M. Call 412 shares, A. H. Duncan 413 shares, E. L. Epperson 399 shares and Y. O. Saunders 200 shares. Duncan and Call also held ninety other shares.
The corporation had a street car line in Las Yegas and East Las Yegas, two towns containing'about 4000 inhabitants each, situated upon opposite sides of the Gallinas river, and from these it had operated its road upon a track leased from the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad Company, to Hot Springs, about eight miles, and still further up a mountainous canyon was the Montezuma Hotel. A short time before De
A few days before Christmas, 1904, plaintiff and defendant met on other business at the latter’s office in St. Louis, and after transacting it plaintiff told defendant that he had been informed that his wife was afflicted with tuberculosis, and had been compelled to leave St. Louis on that account and was then at Colorado Springs. Defendant said he was going to sell out his interests and move West. Plaintiff said that he had just been in New York on business, connected with Las Vegas. property, that it was a good thing, that Las Vegas was said to be one of the best points in the world for persons having tuberculosis, and would be good for the health of defendant’s family. They met again about January first, and plaintiff told defendant about his connection with the Las Vegas enterprise and that he had then a proposition before his New York people and that the company had had a meeting in November and had agreed that if plaintiff could get anyone to put fresh money into it, all the stockholders and directors would surrender their bonds and stock, amounting to about $200,000 of stock and $174,000 of bonds and accept $75,000 in new bonds for their holdings. He also told defendant that the New York people had been considering the proposition, and he was trying to get $100,000 from them to put into it. That the New York people would take in the plaintiff and pay him back the money he had in it and for his services during the four years he had worked for it.
Defendant asked that the matter be left open for thirty days until he could go to Las Vegas, and if he
Defendant finally said to plaintiff he would not give the gentlemen $75,000 “for this wreck here. I can furnish it myself. What I want to do is to get it down to the lowest possible amount.” Plaintiff said he couldn’t do it; that he had got them into it, and couldn’t go to them and ask them to reduce their holdings. Defendant said: “You step aside. I will trade with them.” Plaintiff said: “All right, they are of age, when it comes to that.” Defendant said: “I will take care of you, all you have put into it.” Plaintiff said: “Yes, not only money I have put into it, but I have been working for it for years. I have given four years, the best years of my life to it.” Defendant answered: “You will get all that back, and more too.” Plaintiff in his testimony stated: “It was never contemplated that I would get cash, I will say that. I was to take an equivalent in bonds and stock in his new company; all what money I had put into it and what my services were reasonably worth for four years, that I was to get back in stocks and bonds of the company he was to organize; that was the agreement with him, he would see that I would get all my money back. He said he would give me back in bonds and stock of his new company, to the amount and extent of what moneys I had put into it and my four years of time; whatever that was worth, he would give me back in bonds and stock of the new company. He said whatever money I put into this road and whatever my time was worth, he would give me an equivalent of that in stocks and bonds of his new company. That was the basis of it.”
Defendant got the stock and bonds from plaintiff’s associates at the best price he could and reorganized
The plaintiff proved that at the time he took up the matter with defendant he had put cash into the enterprise to the amount of $28,500, and that the value of his services to the old company had been at least $15,000.
The defendant asked a declaration of law in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence, which was refused, and the court found for the plaintiff in the amount of $43,500. The motion for a new trial was filed assigning the refusal of this instruction, among other things, as ground therefor.
This motion was sustained, and the finding set aside, and a new trial granted on the ground stated upon the record as follows:
“Defendant’s motion for new trial is sustained, because the proof presented does not sustain the cause of action pleaded.”
The substance of the cause of action stated in the petition is, that plaintiff had 393 shares of the capital stock and sixty-four bonds of the Las Vegas Company, and had an option from other stockholders on enough of the stock to make, with his own, 1700 shares, and that the defendant agreed that if plaintiff would turn over the option to him and would permit him to direct, manage and control the reorganization of the properties, and would aid him in that work, the defendant would pay him a sum equal to the amount he had expended for the- company, including the amount paid for bonds and stock and the reasonable value of his services, all of which amounted to $48,500, and that when this sum of money should be paid, the plaintiff would deliver to the defendant his own stocks and bonds.
The defendant, in his letter of March 24, 1905, expressed it as follows: “I will also see that you are not going to be the loser in this deal, and every cent that you have in it now shall be worth a whole cent in cash, and later on perhaps more.”
The court below was evidently satisfied that evidence of a promise to let one into the reorganization of a public utility enterprise on such terms that he would receive stock and bonds sufficient to make him whole or more on account of his investment in the original undertaking did not sustain the allegation of a promise to pay a certain sum of money as set forth in the petition. We are constrained by the uniform course of this court to agree with it on this proposition and to hold that the variance constituted a failure of proof within the meaning of section 2021, R. S. 1909. [Ingwerson v. Railway, 205 Mo. 328; Koons v. St. Louis Car Co., 203 Mo. 227; Laclede Construction Co. v. Tudor Iron Works, 169 Mo. 137; Ringer v. Holtzclaw, 112 Mo. 519; Huston v. Tyler, 140 Mo. 252.] The Ringer case was upon a contract for the sale of lots, and the evidence tended to show an agreement to assign contracts of purchase for the same lots. In the Ingwerson case, the suit was upon a special contract for the carriage of cattle from Bowling Creen to Chicago within the period of twenty-four hours from the time of starting to the time of delivery, while the evidence showed a contract to carry within a reasonable time. In a thorough examination of the question it cites a great number of cases bearing upon the obvious conclusion that a plaintiff cannot sue upon one proposition and recover on another. The order of the St.
PER CURIAM. — The foregoing opinion of Brown, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court.