This case was considered in the decision reported in 114 Missouri Appeal Reports, 217.. After the remand an amended petition was filed in which the plaintiffs alleged in the first count the making of a contract with defendant, June 21, 1902, to do the excavating and grading for the William McKinley High School in the city of St. Louis, which defendant was to erect under contract Avith the board of education of said city, that plaintiffs agreed to do said excavating and grading according to the plans and specifications prepared for the board of education except the excavation below the grade lines for granitoid walks, and defendant agreed to pay plaintiffs for their Avork $6,000; that plaintiffs«entered on the execution of the contract and performed all of it according to the plans and specifications, except such part as Avas not required to be done, and defendant accepted their work as satisfactory and paid them $5,700, leaving a balance of $300 due, which he had'refused to pay. In the second count
The principal contention of error is the refusal of' the court below to sustain defendant’s motion to strike out the reply and for judgment on the pleadings. The reply was faulty in form because it denied the allegations of new matter contained in the answer and counterclaim without pointing out what said allegations were. [Betz v. Telephone Co., 121 Mo. App. 473; Young v. Schofield, 132 Mo. 650; Dezell v. Casualty Co., 176 Mo. 253.] Defendant did not stand on his motion, but went to trial on the merits of the cause, and must be held to have waived any error committed in overruling the motion unless the argument of his counsel against this general proposition should prevail, it is contended the second paragraph of the answer contained a plea of payment of the demand asserted in the second count of the petition, and defendant relied at the trial on this plea of payment as having been confessed, the reply being so defective as to constitute no denial of it; that defendant introduced no evidence in support of said plea, and therefore, was entitled to an order for a verdict in his favor on the second count of the petition and is now entitled to judgment non obstante veredicto on
A witness named Wittier testified for plaintiffs over defendant’s objection, that Lloyd told plaintiffs, or Wittier, who worked for them, to omit compliance with the specifications requiring the top soil to be removed and the placing of two piers at the bottom of the sewer Avhich was to be dug. This was the same evidence held erroneous on the first appeal, and it is insisted its admission at the second trial was contrary to the decision then given. But it will be perceived on reading the opinion of the court on the other appeal, said evidence was received at the first trial to prove it was orally agreed, before the contract between defendant and plaintiffs Avas made, certain terms of the specifications need not be complied with by plaintiffs. Inasmuch as the written contract between plaintiffs and Lloyd required plaintiffs to do the work called for in the contract in accordance with the specifications, we held an anterior oral agreement for the omission of certain specifications was a variation of the later written contract and incompetent. [Tracy v. Iron Works, 104 Mo. 193.] The testimony was received at the second trial, not to prove the contract between plaintiffs .and Lloyd was other than on its face it purported to be, but that in the progress of the work Lloyd notified Wittier not to remove the soil or put in piers at the bottom of the sewer. If defendant chose to relieve plaintiffs of those portions, of the work called for by their contract, and to accept the job as completely performed without them, he might do so. It is averred in the amended petition filed after the cause was remanded, he relieved them from compliance with those items of the specifications; and no doubt the averment
For the reasons given on the last point, the court •rightly gave an instruction requested by plaintiffs which authorized a recovery if plaintiffs had performed their contract according to Lloyd’s direction, even if, by said, direction, they omitted part of the specifications.
The judgment is affirmed.
