34 Mo. App. 591 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1889
This action was one of thirty-seven-brought by plaintiff against defendant to recover the-penalty provided in section 806, Revised Statutes. It
An agreement between George W. Easley, attorney for defendant, and Jonas J. Clark, attorney for plaintiff, as follows:
“It is agreed between the parties in this suit, and in thirty-seven others between the same parties, that ■each of the untried cases shall be submitted to the court upon the same evidence as to the facts as has been offered on the part of plaintiff and given to the court on the trial of the causes herein named, already tried by the court; that it shall be taken and held in such cases, as well those not tried as those tried ; that plaintiff offered evidence tending to show and prove that at the time and place named in the complaint, the defendant ran the engine and train named in the complaint, across the highway named in said complaint without ringing the bell or sounding the whistle on said engine, at any time or place within eighty rods before said engine crossed said crossing ; the record of the opening of the highway to be considered as offered by plaintiff in each case, as also evidence tending to show that said road named in the complaint had been opened in 1872, and had been traveled and worked by the public since April 1, 1873, and that the defendant built cattle-guards on the west side before April 1, 1873, and on the east side since April 1, 1873 ; that the finding of the facts in the cases tried shall be the finding of the facts in the cases not tried ; that the remaining cases (that is, those not tried) shall be continued to await but not to abide the •decision of the court in the causes tried ; and if either party desires to appeal to the supreme court, the causes
(Signed) J. J. Clark, for plaintiff.
“George W. Easley, for defendant.”
The plaintiff then offered in evidence the bill of exceptions in the case between the same parties reported in 89 Mo. 571. To so much thereof as set forth the petition, record and proceedings to establish the public road mentioned in the complaint, the defendant objected. The bill of exceptions shows that when said evidence was adduced in that case, 89 Mo., supra, that no objection was made thereto.
The circuit court permitted, over the defendant’s objections, the whole of said bill of exceptions to be read in evidence.
The said agreement and bill of exceptions was all the evidence offered in the case.
The defendant at the conclusion of the evidence asked a number of instructions, all of which were refused. The finding and judgment of the court was for the plaintiff.
The defendant filed the usual motion for a new trial and an arrest of the judgment which were by the court severally overruled. The defendant brings this case here by appeal.
The solution of these questions must be found in the construction of the said agreement which, if stripped of the useless and redundant words with which it is incumbered, provides about as foil ows :
That in the thirty-seven untried cases the evidence adduced shall be the same as in the one tried; and that the finding of facts in the casetried shall be the finding of facts in the untried cases. There is some further provision that the untried cases shall await the decision of the supreme court in the case tried.
When an argument is presented for judicial construction it behooves the court to endeavor to effectuate the intention of the parties, as that intention is ascertainable in the light of the surrounding circumstances by the rules governing the construction of such instruments. Considerations of good faith demand that the parties be held within the circumference of the obligations they have voluntarily assumed. Courts, too, should be careful not “to stick in the bark” and strain the
If there were undeveloped points in the record of the tried case which might have been, but were not, made the basis of an exception, they are by necessary implication waived by the parties when it was stipulated that the evidence in the untried cases should be the same as in the tried one, and that the findings should be the same.
To permit a different finding in this case than that which was made in that would be to overthrow the agreement. A construction which would abrogate the most important stipulation of the agreement and thus defeat the manifest intention of the parties is not to be tolerated in a court of law.
There is nothing in the provision, authorizing either party after the decision of the circuit or supreme courts
And if on the contrary said judgment had been reversed and the cause dismissed that the defendant would have been entitled to a like judgment in the other untried cases. The agreement and the finding In the tried case constituted an agreed case, upon which the circuit court was authorized in this case to pronounce its conclusion of law. Mumford v. Wilson, 15 Mo. 372; Gage v. Gates, 62 Mo. 416.
In the face of such an agreed case the circuit court could pay no attention to objections to evidence or to proposed instructions. On the finding provided for in the agreement it could do nothing but enter judgment. We do not think for these reasons that it was error in the circuit court to overrule defendant’s objections to said record evidence or to refuse said instructions.
It is likely that the theory of law presented by the defendant’s instructions would have been well enough under other conditions but in this case they could not be considered for the reasons we have already indicated.
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.