33 Mo. App. 44 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1888
delivered the opinion of the court. This action was commenced before a justice of the peace on the following statement of account :
St. Charles Land and Cattle Co., a corporation, and L. S. Holden to George Sturdy, Dr.
To services of self and team from April . 26th to October 25th, 1886, 157 days at $2.50 per day as per agreement ......$392 50
Credit by cash......................... 158 00
Balance due...................•.....$234 50
On a trial anew in the circuit court before the judge sitting as a jury, the plaintiff had a verdict and judg•ment, from which the defendant prosecutes this appeal. Three errors are assigned.
I. The first is, that a new trial should have been granted on the ground of newly-discovered evidence. This ground in the motion for a new trial was supported by the affidavit of Mr. Holden, president of the defendant corporation, and also by the affidavit of James L. Edelin, the absent witness. In our opinion, the affidavit of the defendant’s president, who deposed that he had charge of this litigation for the defendant, does not state facts which show sufficient diligence to enable us to say that the circuit court abused its discretion in refusing to grant a new trial on this ground. In the first place, this affidavit, in so far as it states that the affiant did not know that the absent witness was possessed of the information which the affiant now states that he will testify to, is quite opposed to the probabilities of the case, as shown by other parts of the same affidavit and also by the affidavit of the absent witness hiipself. These affidavits show, that during a considerable portion of the time when the plaintiff worked upon the ranch of the defendant corporation, the absent witness was manager of the ranch, — a circumstance which of itself would suggest to the mind of any one that he
II. The next assignment of error is that the statement of account which was filed before the justice of the peace is insufficient. It seems to us that the statement is sufficient. The statute (R. S. sec. 2851) recites that “no formal pleadings on the part of either plaintiff or defendant shall be required in a justice’s court, but before any process shall be issued in any suit the plaintiff shall file with the justice the instrument sued on, or statement of the account, or of the facts constituting the
III. The third assignment of error, that the verdict is against the weight of evidence, requires no examination, since this is an action at law in which appellate courts are not concerned with the weight of the evidence.
The judgment will be affirmed.