166 Mo. 392 | Mo. | 1902
Lead Opinion
For a clearer understanding of this case the issues and findings of the referee and the material proceedings in the case will be stated in their relation to each other.
The first count of the petition is based on a note for $1,200, executed by the defendant to the plaintiff on September 28, 1889, with ten per cent interest. The answer admits the execution of the note and pleads payment. The referee found that it was not paid, and recommended a judgment for the plaintiff thereon.
The second count of the petition seeks to recover $5,710, being one-half of the losses incurred and paid by the plaintiff in a mining speculation in Arizona, in which the parties, with one Boaz, were interested. The answer admits the mining speculation but denies that the defendant ovyes the plaintiff anything on account thereof, and on the contrary says the plaintiff expended money for the incorporated company that owned the mines and not for the defendant personally, and avers that the defendant put in $2,772.34 for the company, and charges that
The parties were formerly partners in other business in Kansas City, and upon its termination the defendant owed the plaintiff $875.58. The third count of the petition seeks to recover that sum. The answer admits that the defendant owed plaintiff that sum when the partnership was dissolved, but denies that he owes him anything at this time “as the plaintiff is indebted to him in an amount greatly in excess of the amount of said balance so found to be due.” Whether the debt had been wiped out depended upon the application of the proceeds of a note for $5,000, made by defendant to the plaintiff, which will be hereinafter referred to. The referee found that the balance was still due the plaintiff, and recommended a judgment for that amount.
The defendant pleaded three counterclaims, as follows:
First. That he executed two notes for one thousand dollars each to the National Bank of Commerce, the proceeds of which went into the mining speculation; that he afterwards
Second. The defendant claimed in his second counterclaim, that he contracted to sell the plaintiff 1,500 shares of his stock in the mining company for one dollar and a half a share, aggregating $8,250 (?); that 2,500 of said shares of the value of $3,750 were delivered to the defendant, and 3,000 (?) shares of the value of $1,500, were attached to the two notes of $1,000 each, above referred to, which the plaintiff was to pay, and take up the collateral; that afterwards the defendant agreed to sell said shares to one Bristow, for $1.50 a share (here the sequence ends), and judgment is asked against the plaintiff for $8,250. There was no substantial evidence to support this claim, and the referee found that no such contract was ever made by the defendant with the plaintiff.
Third. The third counterclaim alleges that Boaz made his note for $6,885.12, to the order of the plaintiff and the defendant, and secured it by 5,000 shares of the mining company of the value of $7,500, belonging to Boaz, and by Boaz’s interest in 2,500 shares of said company that stood in the name of A. J. Rupert, alleged to be worth $1,000, and by Boaz’s interest in 6,000 shares of said company that stood in the name of plaintiff as trustee, alleged to be worth $3,000, and by 50 shares of the Western Land and Live Stock Company, alleged to be worth $5,000; and that plaintiff indorsed said note for $6,885.12 to himself and appropriated all of the collaterals to his own use, and recovered a judgment in his own name on the note against Boaz for $9,926.17, and the defendant asked judgment against the plaintiff on this count for $8,250. , The reply admitted the note and the judgment thereon and denied that the plaintiff had ever received anything thereon, because
The referee, therefore, recommended a judgment for the plaintiff on the first count for $1,200, and upon the third count for $875.88, and a judgment for the defendant upon the first counterclaim for $611.90, which, deducted from the judgment for the plaintiff, left a balance due the plaintiff of $1,463.98.
The circuit court confirmed the referee’s report and entered the judgment recommended, on July 24, 1897. This appeal was taken on January 7, 1898, and time granted for filing a bill of exceptions, which was properly extended from time to time, and the bill filed on July 7, 1898.
The bill of exceptions recites that the defendant objected to the reference of the cause and excepted to that action of the court. That order was made November 9, 1895, and this bill of exceptions was filed July 7, 1898. There was no bill of exceptions filed during the term at which the order of reference was made.
Upon the coming in of the referee’s report, during the April term, 1897, the defendant filed a motion to submit the first and third counts of the petition and the second and third counterclaims to a jury. This motion was overruled at the April term, 1897, and this bill of exceptions recites that the defendant excepted, but no term bill of exceptions was filed during the April term, 1897, preserving said motion or any
L
The principal error alleged is the action of the court in sending the case to a referee.
It is contended that this was not a proper case for a reference under section 698, Revised Statutes 1899, and, hence, the court had no power to refer it, and that the parties never consented in writing to the reference as allowed by section 69V.
This question is not open to review in this ease, for the reason that the order of reference was entered on November 9, 1895, during the October term, 1895, and no bill of exceptions was filed during that term saving any exception to the action of the court- The recital of the 'facts in the only bill of exceptions that was ever filed in the case, to-wit, on July V, 1898, during the April term, 1898, is wholly unavailing to save the point. If the defendant desired to have that action reviewed he should have filed a bill of exceptions, to that ruling, at the October term, 1895, and have embodied that term bill of exceptions in his final bill of exceptions filed after final judgment, at the April term, 189V. This he failed to do, and there is therefore nothing before this court showing that any exception was taken or saved to the ruling of the circuit court in this regard. [State ex rel. v. Johnson, 132 Mo. l. c. 110; Asphalt Paving Co. v. UUman, 137 Mo. l. c. 564; Vette v. Geist, 155 Mo. l. c. 35.]
Error in denying the defendant a trial by jury upon the first and third counts of the petition and upon the second and third counterclaims, is next assigned.
The final bill of exceptions embodies the motion and the overruling of the same and recites that the defendant excepted. The motion was not a part of the record proper and could only be made so by a bill of exceptions. It appears from statements in the final bill of exceptions to have been filed at the April term, 1897, and to have been overruled at the same term, and no term bill of exceptions was filed preserving the motion, the ruling or the exception. What is said in paragraph I, supra, applies equally here.
But even if the question was open to review, there is no merit in the claim. The motion came too late. The right should have been asserted before the ease was referred. A party can not take chances of winning before a referee, and when he fails, demand a jury trial in the circuit court after the referee’s report is filed. [Young v. Powell, 87 Mo. l. c. 130.]
It is urged, however, that there were three counts of the petition and three counterclaims, and that while it might be said that a reference was proper as to some of the issues, there was no necessity for a reference as to the others, and that as to them the defendant was entitled to a trial by jury, and counsel .cite some New York cases that hold such a practice proper. But section 694, Revised Statutes 1899, regulates such matters in this State. The power to try several counts in a petition (or several counterclaims) separately is given to the trial court, but it is a matter of discretion with the court, and that discretion will not be reviewed unless it was clearly abused. [Hunt v. Railroad, 14 Mo. App. 160; Needles v. Burk, 98 Mo. 474; McFarland v. Railroad, 125 Mo. l. c. 275; Young v. Powell, 87 Mo. l. c. 130.]
It is further contended that as the referee found for the
III.
It is finally contended that as this was a compulsory reference, the defendant is entitled to have this court review the finding of facts, as in equity cases, and it is insisted that the finding of the referee is not only against the weight of the evidence but that there is no evidence to support it.
In Wentzville Tobacco Co. v. Walker, 123 Mo. l. c. 671, it was said that the law is settled in this State, that in cases of compulsory references, the trial court had a right to review the finding of fact by a referee. It was also said that assuming that this court has the power to review the ruling of the trial court in this regard, it could not be done in the state of the record in that case. This remark applies with full force to the case at bar. The appellant’s abstract of the record states that as he admits there was sufficient evidence to support the findings of fact by the referee as to the second and third counts of the petition and as to the second and third counterclaim, he omits the evidence bearing on these matters, and that the evidence' bearing upon the question of whether the defendant directed that any part of the $5,000 note should be applied upon the payment of the $1,200 note sued on in the first count of the petition, was as he states it. He then gives one question and one answer, covering six lines of the plaintiff’s testimony, which relates solely to the credits the plaintiff gave the defendant in his exhibit to the second count of the petition
The abstract furnished by the defendant is not sufficient to inform the court whether the contention of the defendant that there is no evidence to support the referee’s finding upon the first count of the petition, is well taken or not. If the defendant desired to have this court determine whether there was any substantial evidence to support the finding of the referee, he should have made a reasonably fair and full abstract of the record so that the court could decide for itself whether there was any evidence or not. The rules require that abstracts must “set forth so much of the record as is necessary to a full and complete understanding of all questions presented to this court for decision.” The appellant can not shift this duty upon the respondent. [Brand v. Cannon, 118
But we are not content to rest the decision of this contention upon this principle or upon the failure to comply with the rules. There is much more cogent reason for refusing to consider the evidence upon this contention, and that is, no such issue was raised by the pleadings in the case. On the contrary, the only averment in the answer with reference to the application of the proceeds of the $5,000 note, is in the fifth paragraph of the answer (which was the first counterclaim) and in that it is only averred that the two one thousand dollar notes were to be paid out of the discount of the $5,000 note. There is no allegation in any of the pleadings that any part of the proceeds of the $5,000 note was to be applied towards the payment of the $1,200 note or the open account for $875.88. The plaintiff was not required, therefore, to controvert anything the defendant said in his testimony about the $5,000 note except as to the two one thousand dollar notes, and this he did controvert, successfully as to the one in which he and Boaz were accommodation indorsers for the plaintiff, and unsuccessfully as to the other joint note.
But aside from all this the evidence discloses that the plaintiff did not appropriate all of the proceeds of the $5,000 note, except $500, to his own use, as the defendant inferentially charges, but on the contrary he used it in the prosecution of the mining business, for the defendant’s benefit, and gave the defendant credit for the whole of the $5,000 in his state; ment of account in respect to -that business. And the defendant admits that prior to November 8, 1890, he had agreed to stand one-third of the losses on that business, and one-half after that date, and the evidence shows that even after being credited with, the $5,000 note, the defendant was still indebted to the plaintiff on a basis of one-third. The only apparent reason why the referee decided against the plaintiff on his
The evidence as a whole, however, including the defendant’s letters as late as May, 1892, long after the $5,000. note had been discounted and the proceeds used in the mining venture, afford ample basis for the finding of the referee, on the question of the application of the proceeds of the $5,000-note.
It must not be understood, however, that it is intended by anything that is said herein, that this court will weigh conflicting evidence in a case of compulsory reference any more than it would in a reference by consent. [Utley v. Hill, 155 Mo. l. c. 277.] If the court had the power to refer the case, that is, if it was a proper case for a reference, there is no difference in principle between the effect of a finding of fact in such case and in any other case at law. Under the Constitution, this court has a right tó review the facts as well as the law-in any case, however it might have been tried, but it has not been its practice to do so, except in extreme cases, in actions at law, for the reason that experience has shown that it was not necessary to do so to insure a proper administration of justice. The reason for a different practice in equity cases has ceased to exist ordinarily, because equity cases are tried on oral testimony now instead of on written testimony as formerly, but the practice still obtains, without any sufficient reason theref or. There is no more reason why this court should review the findings of a chancellor in an equity case, where all the testimony was given by living -witnesses, orally, than there is why it should review the verdict of a jury rendered under like conditions in a case at law. Certainly the trained legal mind of the chancellor is as capable of reaching as correct a conclusion as to the facts as the untrained minds of the ordinary jurors,
The judgment of the circuit court was for the right party, and finding no reversible error, that judgment is affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
SEPARATE OPINION.
Whilst concurring in the able opinion above, I desire to add that I see no reason for making any difference in appellate practice in reviewing the findings of facts by a referee in an equity case and his findings in a law suit. It may be as pointed out above by the learned author of the opinion that the chief reason upon which the action of appellate courts in reviewing the findings of facts by the chancellor in equity cases has ceased since the original evidence in such cases no longer consists in documents and depositions alone as it did of old, yet, if such is the case, the practice of appellate courts in that respect has not ceased with the reason. This court does weigh the evidence in equity cases, and makes its own findings of facts. I can see why there should be a difference observed in this respect between the findings of facts by a chancellor and the verdict of a jury. The difference in the modes of trial suggest a difference in the modes of review. And especially, since a verdict of the jury before it reaches the ap
But whatever may be said of tbe propriety of reviewing tbe findings of a chancellor, those of a referee stand on a different footing. In .trials before a referee there is no difference in mode in an equity case and a law case. ■ It will not be disputed that it is tbe duty of a trial court to review tbe evidence and set aside tbe findings of tbe referee if in tbe opinion of the trial judge they are against tbe decided weight of-the evidence. This be must do in an equity as well as in a law suit. Tet tbe trial judge in that respect is not in any better position to weigh tbe evidence than is tbe appellate court; be has seen none of tbe witnesses and has only what tbe appellate court has, that is, tbe record of tbe testimony as returned by tbe referee.
Therefore, I maintain that as long as we adhere to tbe practice of reviewing tbe findings of fact by a referee in equity cases, and setting those findings aside and substituting our own when we are of tbe opinion that tbe evidence so requires, we should treat bis findings of facts in a law suit in tbe same way.