181 Mo. App. 64 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1914
This action was instituted before a justice of the peace, by attachment for breach of a contract evidenced by the following memorandum:
“M..........................
“In account with Toomey & Abeam.
10/27/06.
“Sold to National W. H. & St. Co. 12 cars No. 1 Tim. hay at $12.00 ton track Independence.
“Toomey & Aheabn.”
Along with this memorandum a statement was filed in which it is set out that on or about October 27,1906, defendants entered into a contract with plaintiff by which they agreed to sell and did sell to plaintiff twelve cars No. 1 timothy hay at. $12 pet ton. Charging that no part thereof had been delivered to plaintiff, although demand had been made therefor, plaintiff demands judgment in the sum of $404 and interest and costs. Plaintiff recovered before the justice and the cause being appealed to the circuit court, on a trial there a verdict, under an instruction by the court, was returned in favor of plaintiff for one dollar as nominal damages. Plaintiff appealing to our court from that judgment, we reversed it for exclusion of certain evidence tending to show that there was no market at Independence, Iowa, at the time, and of evidence offered tending to show the value of hay in the St. Louis market.. For error in excluding this evidence our court reversed the judgment of the circuit court. A motion for rehearing, however, having been filed and sustained, the judgment of reversal being set aside, pending the reargument the cause was transferred to the Springfield Court of Appeals. There the judgment of the circuit court was reversed and the cause remanded for like reason as given by our court. The opinion of- the Springfield Court of Appeals, under like title, will be found in 144 Mo. App. 516, 129 S. W. 423. The cases coming back to us under the decisions of the Supreme Court, in State ex rel. Dunham v. Nixon et al., 232 Mo. 98, 133 S. W. 336, and kindred cases, we adopted the opinion of the Spring
Appellant assigns four grounds for reversal, First, that the trial court erred in refusing to allow plaintiff to introduce in evidence 'the peremptory instruction for nominal damages, given fiy the court at the request of defendants at the former trial. Second, that the trial court erred in giving two certain instructions, it being assigned that in one of them the court bad unwarrantedly assumed that there was evidence that the contract might have been entered into and thereafter altered by inserting the term “No. 1,” or that all the words above the signature were written before defendant Toomey affixed the signature of his firm, except the words “No. 1,” and that the contract was thereafter altered by the insertion of these words, and that in the other instruction the court had unwarrantedly assumed that there was evidence that only some of the words in the contract may have been written before Toomey, one of the defendants, affixed the firm’s signature and other words thereafter. The third assignment is to alleged error of the trial court in giving on behalf of defendants three instructions, all as alleged, in form most favorable to defendants and highly prejudicial to plaintiff; and fourth, that the verdict was contrary to the evidence and the great weight thereof.
The case was tried, so far as the admission of testimony as to the market value of the hay, in conformity with the rule laid down by the Springfield Court of Appeals and approved by our court in the decisions above referred to.
At this last trial, however, there was evidence introduced challenging the execution of the memorandum in the form in which it is set out, defendants hav
To say that the evidence was conflicting, is putting it mildly; it was flatly contradictory on everything relating to the execution of this memorandum, and as to the fact of any such contract as purports to be set out in this memorandum ever having been entered into on the part of defendants with plaintiff, or as to there ever having been any contract between the parties. We cannot agree with learned counsel for appellant that the evidence so decidedly preponderated in favor of plaintiff that it was the duty of the trial court to have so instructed the jury, and that it is our right and duty, passing on this great preponderance of testimony, to now hold that the jury should have been so instructed. We not only find no such preponderance of evidence, but cannot hold that we, as an appellate court, are to pass on the preponderance of testimony; on the contrary, if there is substantial evidence in support of the verdict, we have no power to interfere with the verdict, provided the jury was prop
The second and third assignments of error are to the instructions given by the court at the instance of defendants. We do not reproduce these instructions; they are long and would hardly be intelligible without a very full recital of the evidence in the case, and it can serve no useful purpose to do that. The evidence was largely devoted to the question of the genuineness of the memorandum, as to whether it had been signed in the form in which it appears, or had been altered, even as to whether there had been any purchase of any hay. As before noted, this evidence is in irreconcilable conflict. These instructions complained of presented defendants’ theory of the case in its several aspects, and we cannot say that they were unsupported by the evidence in the case. Defendants were entitled to this, provided the instructions also followed the law. In that respect, we find no error. Nor do we think they were unduly favorable to respondents. Counsel for appellant claims that as the instruction given at the
The remaining assignment of error, and indeed the first, is on the action of the trial court in refusing to admit in evidence at this trial, an instruction asked and given at the instance of respondent in the former trial of the case, to the effect that under the evidence in the case plaintiff was entitled to recover nominal damages only. The argument here is, that the instruction “was a solemn admission of plaintiff’s cause of action, conceding everything except the amount of damages.” With all the diligence of learned counsel for plaintiff, he has cited us to no authority which sustains the proposition that this instruction should have been admitted in evidence in this case for the purpose claimed, or indeed for any purpose. There may be cases in which an instruction asked in one case may be given in evidence in another as an admission, but this is not such a case. We see no error in the action of the trial court court in excluding it from evidence.
Finding no reversible error in the trial of the cause in the circuit court, the judgment of that court in favor of defendants should be and it is affirmed.