This was a suit brought before a justice of the peace to recover damages for the killing of a ■ cow. The complaint 'alleged that defendant negligently .and carelessly ran over and killed the plaintiff’s cow, ■ etc. The case was tried in the circuit court upon the .following agreed statement of facts :
“ It is agreed that in the trial of this cause. the fol-To wing facts shall be taken as proven: That the cow ¡sued for was worth the sum of $50; that she vvas struck .and was killed by defendant’s train, not on a street or ■public crossing, and that at the time the bell on the*549 train was not ringing, nor was anything done by whistling or otherwise to drive the cow from the track; that the law known as the stock law, approved 1883, was in force in the county of Livingston at the time the cow wms killed within the corporate limits of the city of Ohillicothe, within the county of Livingston ; that she was running at large with plaintiff’s knowledge and consent, but not in violation of an ordinance of the city of Ohillicothe, which said ordinance permits cattle to run ar large between the hours of five o’clock a. m. .and nine o’clock p. M.;■ and that the cow was killed at the hour of two o’clock P. m., on the twelfth day of June, 1888.’’
An agreed case occupies the same footing, and stands in lieu of a special verdict, and the court pronounces the conclusion of law precisely as if a jury had found a vei’dict in that form. Munford v. Wilson, 15 Mo. 540; Gage v. Gates, 62 Mo. 412. In order that the •conclusion of the law on the facts agreed may be pronounced, all the facts necessary to a determination of the case must first be definitely ascertained. If there be any ambiguity, any omission of facts necessary to a recovery, any substantial lack of clearness and certainty on material points, the judgment cannot be allowed to stand. Hughes v. Moore, 17 Mo. App. 48; Moore v. Henry, 18 Mo. App. 35; Lecompte v. Wash, 9 Mo. 551; Gage v. Gates, supra.
The question now is, does the agreed statement ■show all the facts necessary to a determination of the case? Is there any fact necesary to a recovery, or any substantial lack of-clearness on any material point? The plaintiff’s action is grounded on the negligence of defendant. Unless the agreed statement shows directly ■or inferentially that the cow was killed in consequence ■of the negligence of defendant, the judgment cannot be sustained. There is a presumption in favor of all persons that they will exercise care in the performance of
The judgment must be reversed.