179 Mo. App. 553 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1913
This is á suit on an account for extras furnished in the erection of a building. The finding and judgment were for plaintiff, and defendant prosecutes the appeal.
Plaintiff is a contractor and builder and as such erected a house for defendant under a written contract with him. Some changes were had in the plans as the work progressed and numerous extra charges were made by plaintiff therefor. This suit proceeds on an account setting forth a long list of items for extra work done. Defendant deuied liability on account of
After hearing the evidence, the referee filed his report and recommended a considerable judgment for plaintiff — that is, the referee found for defendant on a number of the items of his counterclaim, rejected others, and recommended a judgment for plaintiff as the balance due on his account, after deducting the allowances in favor of defendant on the counterclaim. Exceptions were filed to this report in due time and the court sustained them in part and found a net balance due plaintiff in the amount of $46.37, after deducting all claims allowed on the counterclaim in favor of defendant. For this amount — $46.37—judgment was given in favor of plaintiff. Defendant prosecutes the appeal and complains alone of the action of the
It is said the court erred in this, for that the suit is one at law on an account, in which the reference was had by consent of parties. Therefore, it is urg’ed the report of the referee stands as a verdict and is to be accepted or rejected by the court in its entirety and may not be reviewed and. confirmed in part and rejected in part. Though it be that the parties consented to the reference here, it is entirely clear that the cause was one in which the court was authorized to direct a reference without consent. The pleading on the part of plaintiff reveals an extended account consisting of many items for extra work performed on defendant’s building. Defendant’s counterclaim sets forth many items and prays a recovery therefor on the theory that plaintiff has breached the building contract with respect to all of them and thus occasioned damages in the amount set opposite thereto. The mere fact that these items set forth in the counterclaim accrue as damages for the breach of a contract because of alleged defective materials and defective and inferior workmanship in constructing the building does not remove them from the category of the account contemplated by the statute, for it is obvious they sound in contract. [See Ittner v. St. Louis Exposition, etc. Co., 97 Mo. 561, 11.S. W. 58.]
The statute (Sec. 1996, R. S. 1909) authorizes the court, even though the parties do not consent thereto, to refer a case where the trial of an issue of fact shall require the examination of a long account on either side. It is obvious the pleadings reveal a long account between the parties and the case was a proper one for compulsory reference — that is to say, for a reference by the court of its own motion, and this, too, without the consent or over the objection of the parties. [See Ittner v. St. Louis Exposition, etc. Co., 97 Mo. 561, 11
In this view, the court may dispense with a jury entirely and order a reference, in cases involving n long account, and on the coming in of the referee’s report, review it and exercise its judicial discretion with respect to the matter of approving or rejecting it either as to the whole or in part. In other words, the court may make its own finding on a review of the facts of the case, by accepting a portion of the referee’s report and rejecting the remainder, or through rejecting the entire report and making a finding of facts according to its own views in the premises. This is true, too, in such cases, though it be that the parties consented to the reference, for the character of the case is not changed, and the power of the court over it is not abated, in so far as this matter is concerned, by the mere fact of the consent yielded by the parties to the reference. [See Williams v. Chicago, etc., R. Co., 153 Mo. 487, 54 S. W. 689; Lack v. Brecht, 166 Mo. 242, 65 S. W. 976; Wentzville Tobacco Co. v. Walker, 123 Mo. 662, 27 S. W. 639.] However, the right of the court to thus review and’ correct the findings of fact by a referee on the evidence is confined to those cases where a compulsory reference may be directed under the statute — that is, without the consent of the parties — and to suits in equity where the parties have consented to the reference. [Caruth-Byrnes Hardware Co. v. Wolter, 91 Mo. 484, 3 S. W. 865.] Therefore, it is only in suits at law which are not the subject of a compulsory reference under the statute that the court
Here, tbe case was a proper subject for reference without tbe consent of tbe parties, and tbe mere fact that they consented thereto avails nothing against tbe power of the court to review tbe findings of tbe referee and correct them as appeared proper.
Tbe judgment should be affirmed. It is so ordered.