58 Mo. App. 419 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1894
A preliminary question arises in this ease as to what is properly before us on this appeal. The appeal purports to be taken under the second alternative of section 2253 of the Revised
The respondent claims that the appeal in this case should be dismissed for the above irregularities. That claim is not tenable, because the printed abstract sufficiently shows the filing of a motion for new trial and of a bill of exceptions in due time. It fails to show that an injunction has ever been granted in the case, whereas the judgment entry recites a dissolution of the injunction; but still there is enough to show by the petition, answer and;evidence, whether the court erred in holding that the plaintiffs wejre entitled to no relief at all.
Proceeding to consider the cause upon its merits, as far as we are enabled to do so in this condition of the record, the following facts appear. The plaintiffs by their petition claim that they entered into a contract with the defendant, whereby they were to engage jointly in the milling business under
When the cause came on for final hearing, the following facts were established by the weight of the evidence. No partnership of any kind ever existed at any time between the plaintiffs and defendant. The defendant was engaged in the milling business with two others, and brought such other partners out before he had any individual dealings with the plaintiffs. He never sold or delivered to the plaintiffs any part of the stock or personal property in the mill, but, being indebted to the plaintiffs, agreed with them that he would pay such indebtedness out of
We can not see how upon this showing the plaintiffs have any just ground of complaint. Their petition, as a petition for an accounting, states no cause of action, as it neither states nor prays for an account.. A.s a bill for a dissolution- of partnership it is bad, because it prays for no dissolution. The entire proof' negatives the existence of a partnership. If, therefore, the petition had stated a cause of action properly, the plaintiffs could not recover, since their proof does not substantiate any cause of action either stated or attempted to be stated in their petition. This is not a mere variance, but an entire failure of' proof. Cape Girardeau Railroad v. Kimmel, 58 Mo. 83; Reed v. Bott, 100 Mo. 62. Nor can we see how, upon the showing that the use of the firm name of R. C. Stone & Company was a mere cover, the plaintiffs could invoke the aid of a court of equity in furtherance of the fraud. Scudder v. Atwood, 55 Mo. App. 512.
It results from the foregoing that the judgment-must be affirmed. Judgment affirmed, and cause remanded for assessment of damages on injunction bond.