178 Mo. App. 642 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1913
This is an action begun before a justice of the peace by filing the following account:
St. Louis, Mo., Aug. 17, 1911.
John O’Brien Boiler Works Co.
To Ferdinand Rundelman, Dr.
To 51 hrs. work at Belleville, Ills., at 40 cts. per hour
$20.40'.
Received from company....... 7.00
Paid out for company paid out.. 3.30
Du company.......... 3.70
Cash............ 6'.80
10.50
Helper O ’Brien . 1.00
Car fare.........30
3.30
Wages ............$20.40
Moneys Reed....... 10.50
•Balance dne .........$9.90
Plaintiff prevailed in the justice court and defendant appealed to the circuit court, where the cause was tried before the court without a jury, a jury having been waived, resulting in a judgment for plaintiff for the balance claimed to be due, to-wit, $9.90. Prom this judgment defendant has prosecuted its appeal to this court.
I. Appellant contends that the statement filed before the justice does not measure up to the requirements respecting such statements and is insufficient. With regard to this question we may say, in the first place, that the case is not one where the defendant moved below to make the account more definite, properly saved its exceptions to the overruling of such motion, did nothing to waive the point, and brought that question here for us to review. No such motion was here made. It is true, however, that the defendant interposed an objection to the introduction of any evidence in the case, “for the reason that the petition filed in the justice court is not sufficient under the law to constitute a cause of action;” which objection was overruled, defendant excepting. Such objection, however, merely had the effect of challenging the sufficiency of the account as for a total failure to state a cause of action under the rule respecting the sufficiency of statements before justices of the peace. Consequently it does not affect the question on appeal; for
The question then before us in this regard is whether the account filed is fatally defective and insufficient to support the judgment. The rule is well established that the test of the sufficiency of a statement filed before a justice of the peace is that it must be sufficiently definite and specific to apprise the defendant of the nature of the claim against him and to operate as a bar to another action on the same demand. As to this numerous cases might be cited, but see: Rechnitzer v. Vogelsang, 117 Mo. App. 148, 93 S. W. 326; Fixture Co., v. Baseball Co., 152 Mo. App. 601, 133 S. W. 849.
Tested by this well known rule, is the statement before us sufficient? It must be conceded that the cases in this State, in which the sufficiency o.f various statements filed before justices of the peace have been passed upon, are by no means harmonious. Such lack of harmony, however, at least in all of the more recent cases, does not arise because of any conflict as to the rule to be applied in testing the sufficiency of such statements, but from the application of the rule to the particular statements under consideration. Appellant relies, in large measure, upon the decision of this court in Rechnitzer v. Vogelsang, supra. There the account under consideration was as follows:
St. Louis, 720 Century Bldg., June, 1903.
Mr. Henry Vogelsang, acct. for Edw. J., 10th and Olive.
To Mdse, as per bills................... .$68.00
To Mdse, as per bills.................... 11.80
$79.80
*648 1903.
June 9, by cash..........$5
June 16, by cash.......... 2
$7.00
$72.80
Of this we said, through. Goods, J.: “It will be observed that the statement contains no description of the merchandise sold or the dates on which the sales were made. For aught it contains, the g’oods may have been as well g’roeeries or hardware, as stationery, and the dates may have been during any period preceding June, 1903. In fact the sales occurred on different dates in the year 1899. The statement was insufficient to appraise the defendant of the nature of the claim against him or to bar another action on the same demand. This is true, because there is¡ nothing in it by which the particular merchandise that is the subject-matter of the action can be identified; nothing to show what sort of articles composed the claim, or when they were sold and delivered. Therefore, the facts needed for identification are not given.”
The statement was held to be insufficient to support the judgment; the following’ cases being cited in support of such ruling, viz., Brashears v. Strock, 46 Mo. 221; Swartz v. Nicholson, 65 Mo. 508; Butts v. Phelps, 79 Mo. 302; Boughton v. Railroad, 25 Mo. App-. 10; Doggett v. Blanke, 70 Mo. App. 499; Moffitt-West Drug Co. v. Johnson, 80 Mo. App. 428; McCreary v. Good, 74 Mo. App. 425.
In a later case in this court, viz., Moffitt-West Drug Co. v. Crider, 124 Mo. App. 109, 100 S. W. 1099, a similar account was condemned as insufficient, under the authority of Rechnitzer v. Vogelsang, supra, and the authorities there cited, although the items thereof were dated.
The foregoing eases involved accounts for goods sold and delivered, and many other cases might be referred to involving like accounts. In the case before us the action is one for services. The account is for fifty-one hours work at Belleville, Illinois, at 40 cents per hour. No dates are given, excepting the date appearing at the head of the account which was the date of the institution of the suit. It is not contended that the latter has any reference to the time at which the work in question was performed.
It will be observed that the decision in Rechnitzer v. Vogelsang, supra, is based upon the ground that, since the account was .merely for merchandise, and no dates were given, it was, taken as a whole, so vague and indefinite that it did not serve to identify the subject of the action, and was not sufficient to operate as
The only argument against the account which appears to inhere with any force is that it will not bar another action on the same demand. However, a consideration of this subject has led us to the conclusion that it should also be upheld as against this attack. This is for the reason that we think that plaintiff, as we have said above, must be deemed to have sought to charge the defendant with all of the work which he had performed at Belleville, Illinois; at least for all compensation therefor which was due and owing at the institution of the suit. It is well established that a judgment concludes the rights of the parties wdth respect to the cause of action stated in the pleadings on which such judgment was rendered, whether the pleadings embrace all or only a portion of the demand involved in the cause of action. This is for the reason that a plaintiff may not split one entire claim into two or more actions, whether it arise upon contract or in tort. [See Union Railroad and Transportation Co. v. Traube, 59 Mo. 355; Puckett v. Annuity Ass’n, 134 Mo. App. 501, 114 S. W. 1039.] It is true the rule is otherwise where demands are necessarily separate and distinct causes of action. But even where there are claims payable at different times, as where installments fall due at different periods, arising out of the same contract, even though a separate action may be brought as each amount or installment falls due, never
It would seem that plaintiff’s account should and will operate as a bar to any claim for work performed by him prior to the institution of the suit that can be said to be identified by the account filed. The latter identifies work performed at Belleville, Illinois, which it is said consisted of fifty-one hours, work. And we think that it should be held to state a cause of action for any work thus designated and which was performed by plaintiff; that it will operate as a bar to any future action for any such work; and that should plaintiff have omitted to claim compensation for any other work that may be so classed and identified, he will be precluded by this judgment from asserting such claim.
In this view we are of the opinion that the account, though no dates appear, is not in the same category as the vague and indefinite account appearing in the Rechnitzer case, supra. The subject-matter of the action is so far identified, we think, as to render the account sufficient to support the judgment.
A very liberal rule prevails with respect to statements filed before justices, of the peace; and this should be so because of the character of such courts and the fact that it is common for a plaintiff there to prepare and file his own statement or account. In fact such court is intended as a forum where the poor man, or the small litigant, may obtain redress without the expense of employing counsel. It is necessary, however, that any statement filed be sufficient to sustain a judgment, when tested by the liberal rule applicable thereto. The account before us when tested by that rule, with every reasonable intendment which should
In Grabbe v. Drayage Co., 42 Mo. App. 522, this court, in an opinion by Rombauer, P. J., held an account for services to be sufficient wbicb was in the following form, viz: “To balance due for wages as common laborer, ten days, $16;” the date of the rendition of the services not appearing. And in this connection see also Allen v. McGouagh, 77 Mo. 478; Weese v. Brown, 102 Mo. 299, 14 S. W. 945; Jarrett v. Mohan, Supra; Findley v. Dyer, 79 Mo. App. 604; Fixture Co. v. Baseball Co., supra.
We do not undertake to harmonize the various cases on the subject, nor to justify the ruling in all of the cases just referred to, under the rule stated and here sought to be applied. We refer to a few of the many cases that might be cited, merely as showing the lengths to which our courts have gone in sustaining informal and rather indefinite accounts filed before justices of the peace.
II. Appellant assigns as further error that plaintiff was permitted to recover for services rendered other than that called for in the account; and that thereby plaintiff was permitted to plead one cause of action and recover, in part at least, upon another. This assignment of error is predicated upon testimony of plaintiff at the trial which made it appear that a part of the services rendered and for which the plaintiff claimed compensation were performed in the city of St. Louis and not in Belleville, Illinois, as charged in the account.
It is quite true that it is no more permissible for a party to bring a suit before a justice of the peace on one cause of action and recover on another, than it is in a court of record. [Turner v. McCook, 77 Mo. App. 196; St. Louis Trust Co. v. Real Estate Co., 82 Mo. App. 260; Green v. Crutcher, 143 Mo. App. 595, 128
In the case before us, there was not a total failure of proof as contemplated by section 2021, Revised Statutes 1909; but a variance between the allegations of the statement of the cause of action as contained in the account, and the proof offered in support thereof. And section 1846, Revised Statutes 1909, provides the manner in which the objecting party must proceed to take advantage of such variance. It is also well settled that a party must interpose timely objection to the admission of evidence outside of the scope of the pleadings, grounding such objection upon such variance between the pleadings and the proof:
In Fisher, etc., Co. v. Realty Company, 159 Mo. 562, 62 S. W. 443, the court said: “It has always been the law that the allegata and probata must correspond. That a party cannot declare upon one cause of action and recover upon another is axiomatic in our law. But it is also equally well settled in our State that timely and appropriate objection must be made to the introduction of the evidence offered, on the distinct ground of a variance between the allegata and probata, and that the objecting party must proceed in the manner provided by section 2096, Revised Statutes 18891 (now section 1846, Revised Statutes 1909), otherwise Ms objection will not be considered. And! the affidavit setting forth in what respect a party has been misled is the sole test of the materiality of a discrepancy between the allegata and probata. If a party fails to avail himself of section 2096, supra, in the trial court, it is too, late to complain in the appellate court.” Many authorities are cited. [See, also, Mellor v. Railway Co., 105 Mo. 455, 16 S. W. 849; Harrison v. Lakenan, 189 Mo. 581, 88 S. W. 53; Donovan v. Brewing Co., 92 Mo. App. 341; White v. Gilleland, 93 Mo. App. 310; Litton v. Railroad, 111 Mo. App. 140, 85 S. W. 978, and authorities cited; Avery v. Tucker, 137 Mo. App. 428;
In the case before us, the record discloses that appellant did not interpose timely objection below to the introduction of the evidence which it is. now claimed permitted a recovery• upon a. cause of action different from that stated in the account. It is true that the record reveals a brief colloquy between counsel and the court respecting a portion of the services which from the testimony appear to have been rendered in the city of St. Louis. However, no objection whatsoever appears to have been interposed; nor was any exception preserved to any action of the court in the premises; and no affidavit of surprise was filed. This being true, under the authorities to which we have above referred, it is now too late for the appellant to complain of a variance between the pleading and proof; for, as to this, the appellant is now concluded by the judgment.
The foregoing are the only assignments of error before us. We have carefully examined them, and our conclusion is that they must be ruled against the appellant. The judgment should therefore be affirmed. It is so ordered.