130 Mo. App. 668 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1908
This suit was commenced before a justice of the peace where it was tried and appealed. The statement filed with the justice begins as follows:
“Nevada, Mo., May 8th, 1906.
“Mr. William Rose. In account with Harry C. Moore »
Then follows an itemized account of the articles sold and the value of each.
At the time of the sale of the goods the wife and children of defendant were living separate and apart from him, on account of his alleged misconduct. At the trial plaintiff’s counsel in his opening statement to the jury referred to what he expected the testimony would show was the cause of the wife and children leaving their home, whereupon defendant’s counsel said: “Now,
One objection to plaintiff’s right of recovery is that the statement is not sufficient to support the judgment or in other words that the suit is upon one cause of action and recovery is on another. The assumption of the defendant is that the statement implies that the goods were sold to the defendant whereas all the evidence shows that they were bought by the wife. This is a mistake as will be seen by reference to the heading of the account which merely shows that defendant was charged with the goods: And if the theory on which the case was tried was the correct one it could make no difference as a purchase made by the wife was the act of defendant, she being his agent.
Another objection to the finding of the jury is that there was no proof of the value of the goods. There Avas some but it was slight. The plaintiff was asked “What did that bill of goods amount to, Mr. Moore.” To which he answered: “I think the entire purchase price Avas something like $85.” It was sufficient however, to carry the case to the jury on the question of value.
The defendant lived on a farm some distance from Nevada. Plaintiff’s attorney sent the constable to defendant’s home to make a demand upon him for clothing of the wife and children, that the wife had there Avhen she left home, but he refused to give them up. But af
The wife’s evidence was introduced to show the purchase of the goods, their purpose, and necessity for them. This is assigned as error, the argument being that while the wife was living separate and apart from her husband she was not his agent. In Scrutchfield v. Sauter, 28 Mo. App. 150, it is held, that the wife is the agent of the husband “so long as she is not separated front Mm by her fault.” We must assume from the position taken by defendant when plaintiff undertook to prove that the wife was driven from home by the husband’s cruel treatment, that: “it makes no difference whether these people were living together or living separate and apart, the obligation of the husband is the same;” that the defendant’s theory of the case was that the wife had the authority to bind the husband for necessaries, and that the only question, before the jury was whether the goods in question were necessaries and whether the wife and children were in want of them at the time she made the purchase or that the husband had failed to supply them. [McKinney v. Guhman, 38 Mo. App. 344.] There can be no dispute but what the wife is the agent of the husband in the purchase of necessaries in such cases.
The defendant asked the court to instruct the jury on his theory that when the wife and husband were living apart t'here was no implied authority on the part of the wife to bind him for necessaries. The court refused to' so instruct. The action of the court was proper for
The question is raised as to the propriety of the action of the court in making certain remarks in the presence of the jury to which reference has been had. Ordinarily what the court said at that time would have been improper. But as both parties agreed that the jury might remain while the discussion was going on as to the law that should be incorporated in the instructions, we do not think defendant has any cause to complain. The court was merely calling attention that certain facts would not be considered, because under the agreed theory upon which the case was tried, they would not be pertinent on the issues to be submitted to the jury. And the facts to which the court alluded were those that defendant had from the. very beginning insisted, were not proper on the issues as he understood them to be.
Finding no error in the cause it is affirmed.