147 Mo. App. 578 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1910
(after stating the facts).— The petition is addressed “To the Honorable Judge of the Circuit Court, City of St. Louis, State of Missouri, in Chancery sitting.” We have long since abandoned in this State the old form of a bill in equity. Our statute (Revised Statutes 1899', sec. 592) providing that the first pleading on the part of the plaintiff is the petition, prescribes what it shall contain, the third requisite being that it shall contain £ ‘ a demand of the relief to which the plaintiff may suppose himself entitled. If the recovery of money be demanded, the amount thereof shall be stated, or such facts as will enable the defendant and the court to ascertain the amount demanded.” Construing this latter clause, our courts have often held that when in a suit of equity, there is a general prayer for relief, as there is in this case, such relief will be granted as the facts set out will warrant. It was long ago decided that since the adoption of our Code, the bill of discovery, as known to the ancient chancery practice, no longer prevailed in this State, our courts holding- that the statutory provisions for taking depositions have done away with the necessity of the old bill of discovery and. that
The fraud and conspiracy charged, if any is charged, is that the individual defendants merely organized the St. Louis Wood Fibre Plaster Company with the fraudulent intent to injure the plaintiff — how they were to do so is not stated — and that it was designed by the defendants, when the agreement was made, that when it should suit the purposes and interests of the Acme Cement Plaster Company and the defendants, that the St. Louis Wood Fibre Piaster Company would he abandoned by them. How the abandonment of the St. Louis Wood Fibre Piaster Company by the defendants named was to affect plaintiff is not stated. He had, or at least avers, no contract with these individual defendants, not even a personal one with Will is, to stay in and with the St. Louis Wood Fibre Plaster Company. Non constat but that the last named company still flourished even after these defendants abandoned it. It is not even charged that the latter company sold or assigned or transferred the one machine leased — and- there is hut one charged to have been leased. For all that appears they may have obtained it without the consent of the St. Louis Wood Fibre Plaster Company.
Without going further into a consideration of the case or into a discussion of all the points presented in it by the learned counsel for appellant, we have reached the conclusion that the petition fails to state a case entitling plaintiff to any relief in equity on the facts