5 Mo. App. 59 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1878
delivered tbe opinion of tbe court.
Tbe petition alleges that plaintiff, being a tenant from year to year, and, as such, in possession of a tenement on the fair-grounds of defendant, the St. Louis Agricultural and Mechanical Association, the defendants forcibly, wrongfully, and unlawfully broke into and entered the
It appears from the testimony that defendant Hastings-occupied, under a license from the defendant the St. Louis Agricultural and Mechanical Association, a frame building bn the fair-grounds during the fair-week of many successive years. Afterwards, in 1870, the plaintiff was put into-possession of this building, as he says, as tenant from year to year, at the rate of $150 a year, but, as defendants’ witness says, under an agreement which was renewed from year to year whilst he remained there, and which gave him the right to use- the building only during the fair-week of each year, and such time before and after as was necessary for fitting-up the place and removing his goods. The building was a frame, thirty-four feet by eighteen, having several glazed windows and a door, and was used by plaintiff as a. restaurant and cook-shop. The plaintiff' went to some expense in fitting it up; put in a boiler, benches, chairs, cooking-range, and utensils, dishes, plates, crockery, knives, and forks, table-linen, an ice-box, and various articles. All this cost him, he says, $2,000. But as to the value of the articles there is no testimony. He- was in the habit of locking up the shed and boarding up the windows during
The plaintiff asked the court to instruct the jury substantially as follows:
1. That if defendants broke into plaintiff’s restaurant and threw out and injured his goods, they should assess damages, under the second count, in such sum as will compensate him for the loss.
2. If plaintiff was in possession under a parol agreement with the president of defendant the Agricultural and Mechanical Association, having been in such possession for three years, Regularly paying his rent, and defendants forcibly entered and turned him out, and keep him out, plaintiff
3. If defendants, in combination with one another, committed the wrongs complained of in the first and second counts, with the intention to injure plaintiff, the jury may assess the damages at such sum, not exceeding $2,000 in either count, as they may think proper.
These instructions were refused. The court, of its own instance, instructed the jury that they could only find nominal damages under the first count; and that they ought to-find for plaintiff under that count if they believed from the evidence that plaintiff was in possession as tenant from year to year, under an agreement with the president of the Agricultural and Mechanical Association, having paid his rent according to agreement, and that defendants forcibly entered and took possession.
And, at the instance of defendants, the court instructed the juiy substantially as follows :
1. Therfe can be no recovery under the second count, no conversion having been proved.
2. Plaintiff cannot recover unless there is a preponderance of testimony on his side; and the burden of proof is-on him.
3. If the jury believe from the evidence that the premises-in question were a cook-booth built by defendant the Agricultural and Mechanical Association, for purposes connected with its annual fair-week ; that defendant granted and sold to plaintiff only the right to occupy the same during fair-week; and the $150 paid by plaintiff was paid for that, privilege during the year or years he used and occupied the booth ; — then defendant had the right to sell the privilege-to Smith and Hastings, and to put them into possession during the fair-week of 1873, and the jury will find for defendant on the first count.
The testimony offered by plaintiff as to the profits which* he had made by his business at the fair in former years was properly excluded, as it was no criterion from which the jury could determine what profit he would have made in 1873, or whether he would make any profit at all. Whether-the plaintiff would have made or lost money by the booth during the fair of 1873 was mere matter of speculation,, insusceptible of proof. Remote, speculative, and merely contingent profits, such as plaintiff might have made by carrying on a business in a building he had leased, had not. the lessorrefused him possession, especially when established-! only by the opinions of witnesses, are not recoverable.. Giles v. O’Toole, 4 Barb. 261; Callaway M. & M. Co. v. Clark, 32 Mo. 305. There was, therefore, no evidence of any actual damage under the first count, and the plaintiff' was not prejudiced by the refusal of instruction No. 2 ; and-the instruction given by the court, that only nominal damages could be given on the first count, was correct.
That a wrong has been done to the plaintiff is possible, and if so, he has, or had, a legal remedy for it. But we see no error in this record, to warrant a reversal of the judgment, and it is accordingly affirmed.