16 Mo. App. 527 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1885
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action on an account commenced before a justice of the peace. In the circuit court the cause was
1. The first point made by the defendant is that the circuit court erred in allowing the plaintiff to file ah amended statement of his cause of action, and in not dismissing the suit on the defendant’s motion, because of the insufficiency of the original statement. No exception was saved to this ruling, and therefore it can not be considered. By neglecting to save an exception to this ruling, the defendant put himself in the position of going voluntarily to trial on the statement as amended, and of waiving his objection to the original statement.
2. The next objection of the defendant is that the court erred in admitting in evidence the written bid submitted by the plaintiff to the defendant on November 1, 1879, for the doing of the work for which the action is brought. This objection is predicated upon the theory that this bid was not the contract under which the work was done; but that it was done under a contract signed by the defendant five or six days later, to wit, on the 5th of November, 1879. At the time this paper was admitted in evidence, it had not been shown that the proposition which it contained had been accepted by the defendant. Until this was shown, it did not appear that it constituted any part of the contract between the plaintiff and the defendant. Although the plaintiff testified that this bid was his contract, that testimony did not tend to show that it was the defendant’s contract. It therefore stood as a mere proposition. But though it may have been irregular to admit it in evidence at the time when it was offered without something to indicate that it was to be followed up by evidence of acceptance; yet this irregularity seems to have been cured by what was brought out in a subsequent stage of the plaintiff’s testimony, where he stated that this bid was accepted, and that he immediately went to work under it, and did the work under it.
This testimony, it will be perceived, has no tendency to negative the plain inference which arises from the fact that the plaintiff wrote upon the paper the words above stated, and signed his name to it; that this paper became his final agreement in the premises. It does not show, or tend to show, that he did not understand its contents from previous conversation, or that he made a mistake in signing it. If he had made such a mistake, it would not have made it the less his contract, unless the mistake was the mistake of both parties. A person who is sui juris can not deliberately sign a contract in writing, and then, in the absence of evidence creating any inference of fraud or imposition, be heard to say that such instrument is not his agreement. This paper was, then, undoubtedly the plaintiff’s agreement;
This instruction, it will be perceived, left it to the jury to say whether the paper of November 5, 1879, was the only contract between the parties. We think, for the reasons above stated, that there was no substantial ground afforded by the evidence upon which the court could submit such a question to the jury. A court should not submit to-a jury a question about which fair-minded men could not possibly differ in opinion, because one of the parties unreasonably disputes it. This instruction, we think, had a tendency to mislead the jury.
4. This brings us to the fourth observation which we feel bound to make upon this record, in view of the assignment
For the error of submitting to the jury the question whether or no the contract of November 5, 1879, was the only contract between the parties touching the subject-matter of the suit, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.