166 Mo. App. 11 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1912
— This is an action, the petition in which contains three counts.
The first count alleges a contract between plaintiff and defendant city, the plaintiff a manufacturing corporation, one of the defendants the city of Fulton, a city of this state, the others certain of its officers. For brevity we will hereafter refer to the defendants in the singular, intending by that the city. The contract is in the form of a proposal from plaintiff, accepted by defendant city, and all in writing, under which plaintiff proposed to furnish to the city “two Obear Air Lift Displacement Pumps of the aggregate
The second count charges that after the installation and acceptance of the pumps and air compressor plaintiff, for the purpose of reinstalling the pumps at a lower working point in the well, at the instance and request and understanding with defendant, selected, ordered and caused to be shipped to defendant the necessary mechanism and materials for installation of the pumps at a cost of $643.40. Itemizing this account, plaintiff asks judgment for that amount.
There is a further count in the petition, setting up an equitable cause of action, which it is unnecessary to notice as it was disregarded at the trial and no error is assigned upon it one way or the other.
The answer, admitting the execution of* the contract set out in the petition for the installation of the pumping plant, avers that that was the only contract entered into between the city and plaintiff; admits that under that contract plaintiff proceeded to install the'pumping machinery; that by the terms of it plaintiff obligated itself that the plant would pump 300 gallons of water per minute when both pumps were operated at the same time and when the lift of the water would not exceed 500 ’ feet, but denies that plaintiff
The answer to the second count denies generally the averments of that count, and after a more specific denial of the correctness of the items in this count, pleads that the city, by a resolution duly adopted by its council, offered to pay plaintiff the sum of $295 to cover the repair of the pump on condition that plaintiff would replace the destroyed pumps and make the pumps work when operated together and at the same time according to the terms of the contract, it being provided in the resolution to this effect that nothing in it was intended to change or alter the terms and provisions of the original contract. It is also averred that plaintiff refused this, wherefore it is claimed that defendant is not liable.
A counterclaim is also interposed by another count in the answer, the city claiming $3681.62 by way of expenditures made and damage to the city for breach of contract by plaintiff.
It appears by the recitals of the abstract of the record proper that after a hearing of the evidence of
The jury returned a verdict on the first count of plaintiff’s petition in favor of defendant; judgment followed and plaintiff filed a motion for new trial, one in arrest of judgment and one to set aside the nonsuit on the second count of the petition. The only motion for new trial before us and as set out in the abstract as having been filed by plaintiff, after assigning that the verdict is against the evidence and the weight thereof and against the law as applied to the evidence and against the law as set out in the instructions given by the court, reads as follows:
“3. That the court erred in admitting incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial (evidence?), offered by plaintiff.
‘ ‘ 4. That the court erred in excluding competent, relevant and material evidence offered by this plaintiff.
“5., That the court erred by giving instructions Nos. 7, 4, 9, requested by defendant.
“6. That the court erred in declining to give instructions Nos. 2, 3 and 5 requested by this plaintiff.
“7. That the court erred in giving instructions Nos. -=— of its own motion, and in modifying and giving as modified instructions Nos. -, asked by plaintiff.
“8. That the court erred in admitting testimony offered by defendant as to statements and representations, of the parties to the contract sued upon, prior to the execution of said contract.
*22 “9. That the court erred'in sustaining defendant’s demurrer to the second count of plaintiff’s petition.”
This motion being overruled plaintiff duly excepted. It also filed a motion in arrest of judgment, which was overruled, but no error is here assigned on that.
We will dispose of this case by taking up the points assigned for error by learned counsel who appeared before us for appellant, of whom it is no more than fair to say that he appeared in the case after it had been appealed to this court, not having previously participated in its conduct.
The first point is that the court erred in admitting evidence of alleged representations by plaintiff’s agent before the contract was made. This point is well saved by the eighth error assigned in the motion for a new trial. Counsel cites a number of cases in support of the proposition that all prior negotiations, no fraud being alleged or appearing, are merged in the contract. There is no doubt of the correctness of this. But it disappears from this case on consideration of the instruction which the court gave to the jury at the instance of plaintiff at the conclusion of the trial. That instruction, number 4, is to the effect that the- law deems all statements or representations of the parties to a written contract pertaining to the subject-matter of the contract, made prior to the execution thereof, as merged or embodied in the contract, “hence in determining whether or not plaintiff is entitled to recover in this suit, you have to determine only whether or not plaintiff complied with the terms of said contract as set out in other instructions.” We hold that this instruction was sufficient to cure whatever error was embodied in admitting the testimony of witnesses as to the preliminary negotiations and understandings of the parties prior to the making of the contract. [Anderson v. Union Terminal R.
There are cases in which the evil wrought by the admission of improper testimony cannot be said to be cured by its subsequent withdrawal but we do not think that that wa,s the situation in the case at bar.
The second and third points go to alleged error in the admission of evidence offered by the defendant, particularly to certain evidence given by Judge N. D. Thurmond, which is claimed to have been evidence that an expert alone could give, it being correctly stated that Judge Thurmond in his own testimony had admitted that he knew nothing about engineering except what had been told him by plaintiff’s agent. They also go to evidence given by him as to what the plaintiff’s agent had told him about the operation of a like pump in some asylum for the insane. A very careful examination of the testimony of Judge Thurmond fails to show that when examined as a witness by defendant, he gave any testimony that might be considered expert testimony. All he gave that we can construe as expert evidence was given under cross-examination by counsel for plaintiff and this not arising out of his direct examination. As to his evidence as to. the alleged statements of an agent of plaintiff in regard to what a well at the insane hospital was doing, it is argued that that was immaterial and not res gestae but res inter alios acta and a collateral issue. This objection, in the main answers itself — being merely immaterial, its admission would not constitute reversible error. But all inquiry by us into the correctness of the ruling of the trial court upon the admission of testimony offered and introduced by defendant, save as to the admission of evidence of transactions prior to making the contract, is closed by failure of plaintiff to assign this as error in the motion for a new trial. But apart from the evidence as to
The fourth point is that the court erred in ruling that the burden was on plaintiff to show that there was an insufficiency of water in the wells, it being claimed that defendant was bound to show there was a sufficiency of water. We cannot agree that this assignment is sustainable. The contract itself contains this provision, after a proposal upon the part of plaintiff to furnish the pumps, namely, “conditioned of course that the wells will furnish 300 gallons of water per minute.” In the course of the trial this occurred, the contracting agent of plaintiff being under examination as a witness in its behalf: Plaintiff offered to show by this witness the capacity of the pump. Objection w'as made, on what ground is not stated. Whereupon the court observed: “I understand that contract to mean that the party furnishing the pump would furnish a pump that would actually pump three
The fifth point is that the court erred in admitting evidence of alleged misrepresentations of the pump, either alleged to have been made before the contract or after the contract, and particularly to the question made of witness Wenger and his answer, the question being: “Do you think it was on account of the flow of water that the pump didn’t pump as great as at the start, or was it on account of the pump? A. It was on account of the pump misrepresentation. ’ ’ This witness was also asked to state whether or not the failure to get the 50 gallons in the small well was on account of the deficiency of water or the deficiency of the pump. To this the witness ' answered, ‘ ‘ The deficiency of the pump.” As to the admission of the evidence of the representations made before entering into the contract, we have disposed of that in consideration of the first point made by learned counsel for appellant. We cannot sustain the further assignment
The sixth point made by the learned counsel for appellant is that the court erred in giving improper instructions for defendant. The only instructions on which error is assigned in the motion for new trial are plaintiff’s instructions numbered 7, 4 and 9, and these are the only ones open to our consideration. Instruction No. 7 is the one which we have before referred to, which told the jury that it was plaintiff’s duty to pump 300 gallons of water per minute or to demonstrate that the wells were not yielding 300 gallons of water per minute, and if from all the evidence they believed plaintiff failed to do this, it did not comply with the contract. As we have before stated, so far as this instruction can be construed to throw the burthen of proof of sufficiency of flow of waiter in the well on plaintiff, we think it correct. As to the remaining part of it, that it was defendant’s duty to pump 300 gallon's of water per minute, there is no question whatever of the correctness of this, as that is precisely what is provided for in the contract.
Without setting out the fourth and ninth instructions in full, it is sufficient to say of them that they cover the contract correctly as to the requirements of plaintiff in regard to furnishing force and proper setting of the pumps and as to the work they were ex
The error assigned to the ninth instruction is that the court by that told the jury that without con
The seventh point is that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer to plaintiff’s second count and in refusing to set aside the nonsuit thereon. This demurrer was sustained to the second count and the
In his argument in this case learned counsel for appellant assigns error on a number of other instructions given for defendant but these are the only ones specified in the motion for new trial and we cannot go outside of that to examine or test the correctness of instructions.
The eighth point is to the error of the court in modifying plaintiff’s instructions, We are unable to determine from the abstract before us the modifications’made by the court in plaintiff’s instructions, so that we are bound to disregard this assignment. We might dispose of this point also on the other proposition that in the motion for new trial the only assignment covering this is the seventh, which we have given before but to repeat is as follows: “The court erred in giving instructions Nos. — of its own motion, and in modifying and giving as modified instructions Nos. — asked by plaintiff.” It does not appear that the court gave any of its own motion, and we are unable to determine what modifications the court made in any instructions, as before remarked.
The ninth point urged by counsel for appellant is that the court erred in refusing to give instructions
Passing for the present the tenth point and taking up the eleventh point, it is urged that the sale was on trial and the contract was entire, and that the failure to object within thirty days after installation on November 27, 1907, was an acceptance which waived all conditions, and the fact that defendant continued to use the compressor until the day of the trial and thereafter to the present time and used the small pump until after suit was brought.and by its carelessness broke the large pump and failed to pay for its repair, amounted to an estoppel to dispute plaintiff’s claim and a waiver of any condition, and- it is urged that the court should reverse the cause and direct entry of judgment for plaintiff.
We might dispose of this by saying that an estoppel, to be available, must be pleaded, and none was pleaded. In fact, we have nothing in the abstract of the record to show that a reply of any kind was filed. While it is true that when a cause is tried on the assumption that a reply has been filed taking issue on any new matter in the answer, it is too late to .urge the failure to reply in the appellate court. Indeed no such point is here made by counsel for respondent. But that rule is not broad enough to excuse the failure to plead estoppel.
Waiving this, a careful examination and consideration of the testimony in the case fails to show any acceptance and waiver whatever, which constitute an estoppel. In point of fact, from the very first installa
The remaining point is numbered ten and is based upon the refusal of the trial court to grant a new trial on the ground that the verdict is against the evidence and against the weight of the evidence and on account of the admission of improper evidence and the giving .of improper instructions. We have disposed of the questions arising over the admission of the evidence and over the giving of instructions. Reading over this whole record we see no reason whatever to challenge the verdict of the jury as not being sustained by ample testimony. In fact we are so much impressed with the testimony introduced at the trial as to the complete failure of the plant to do the work required that we do not see how any jury could have arrived at a different conclusion. We will not disturb that verdict.
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.