52 Mo. App. 338 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1893
— This is an action based on the following instrument of writing executed by defendant to plaintiff, viz.:
“Carthage, Mo., July 21, 1890.
“There is due Geo. Webster as commissions on the sale of my interest in the Herin & Myers mine thirteen hundred dollars ($1,300), said amount to be paid on September 21, 1890, when the balance of the purchase money is paid. Amount due $5,000.”
Plaintiff had judgment below and defendant brings the case here. The trial was without a jury, the court, of its own motion, giving the following declaration of' law: “The court declares the law to be that if
This declaration is a proper statement of the law on the hypothesis as to the facts. It is supported by the case of Tureman v. Stephens, 83 Mo. 218, and cases therein cited. If the matters hypothetically put in the instruction are true, then the Tureman case is authority, by close analogy, for the instruction. It certainly ought not to be allowed defendant to alter his arrangement with the purchasers of the property in regard to the payment of the $5,000, to the prejudice of plaintiff without his consent, coupled as it is with defendant’s failure to make any effort to collect the balance. No voluntary act of defendant, whether by omission or commission, which, without plaintiff’s consent, would work to his prejudice, as contemplated by the contract, ought to be allowed as a shield to defendant.
This only leaves the further question whether there was evidence upon which to base the declaration of law. A perusal of the record satisfies us that there was. That evidence being before the trial court, the conclusion to be drawn therefrom belonged to that
We feel bound to affirm the judgment.