49 Mo. App. 201 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1892
This action is brought to recover damages for the breach of a contract, by which, in consideration of the plaintiff’s erecting certain stalls and structures on a farm leased and occupied by him in St. Louis county, the defendant agreed to furnish a stallion and a certain number of mares to be kept therein at an agreed price per month, to be paid by him to the plaintiff. The answer embodied: First. A general
Three substantial questions arise upon the record: First. Whether the court erred in admitting parol evidence to show that the first count of the petition in the prior action, pleaded by the defendant as an estoppel, had been voluntarily withdrawn by the plaintiff from the jury by taking a nonsuit as to that count. Second. Whether the court was right in instructing the jury that, if they should find that the first count of that petition had been so voluntarily withdrawn by the plaintiff, that action did not estop the plaintiff from' maintaining the present action. Third. Whether the court was right in instructing the jury as to the measure of damages. We shall consider these three subjects separately, and shall state in connection with each such facts as appear to be sufficient to make our holding understood.
I. In order to understand the first subject of contention, it is necessary to state that the parties had a disagreement as to the amount which should be paid under the contract fo? keeping the horses for the month of June, 1888, and that the defendant refused to pay the bill which the plaintiff rendered for that month, unless a certain deduction was made, which the plaintiff refused to make. It further appears that at the expiration of the next month, namely, on the thirty-first of July, 1888, the defendant withdrew all of his horses from the premises of the plaintiff, and refused in any manner further to perform the contract on his part. It further appears that on the fifth of September, 1888, the plaintiff instituted a suit in the circuit court of the
In this ruling we perceive no error. Under a plea of res adjudicata, it is equally inadmissible, as in any other case, to introduce parol evidence to contradict a judicial record; but, where the record does not distinctly show what was adjudicated in the prior action, this may be proved by parol. The doctrine was thus stated by Wagner, J., in Hickerson v. City of Mexico, 58 Mo. 61, 65: “It is undoubtedly true, that, in some of the earlier cases, it was decided that a judgment was
II. On the issue of res judicata, the court instructed the jury that, “if the evidence shows that said issue was withdrawn from the consideration of the
We perceive no error in these rulihgs. The contention of the defendant is, in substance, that this was an entire contract, and that but one action could be maintained to recover damages for its breach. It is what is called a severable or divisible contract. It was a contract'to make'certain payments to the plaintiff in installments at a certain rate “per month.” The contract uses this expression, “per month,” in several.places. It says in one place: “In consideration of these structures being prepared and constructed for said Moser’s benefit, the said Moser hereby agrees to furnish for keeping in said box, -stall'and yard one stallion, for which said Moser hereby agrees to pay the said West for keeping the same the sum of $20 per month from the time when said barnyard shall be ready.for occupancy,” etc. Further on it recites: “And the said Moser, in consideration of the aforesaid structures being erected exclusively for his use and benefit, hereby agrees to furnish said stallion and said mares' at the above-stipulated prices per month for said stallion, and $8 per month for each mare to be furnished for keeping by said Moser, as above stipulated, from the date of delivery,” etc. And further on it says: “But it is agreed and understood by and between the parties hereto that, in ease of the failure of Moser to furnish other horses or other mares as substitute, it is hereby agreed, and said Moser hereby agrees, to pay said West the sum of $28 per month for said stallion and mares,
Now, it is the settled law that, where payments are to be made under a contract in installments, a separate right of action accrues to recover each installment whenever that installment is due, and is not paid. The decision of the supreme court of this state in Adler v. Railroad, 92 Mo. 242, is to the effect that, where payments under a contract are to be made in installments, and one of those payments is retained by the party who is to make the payment, until a specified time, that installment may be separately assigned, because it is a separate demand or cause of action. In giving the opinion of the court, Nobton, J., said: “While the contract is entire, there can be no doubt, under the rule, in the case of Union Ry. & Trans. Co. v. Traube, 59 Mo. 363, that each monthly payment, as it became due, constituted a separate demand, for the recovery of which an action could be maintained; and there can be no question as to the fact that, within ninety days after the completion of the work, in the event of the nonpayment of the retained percentage, that an action would be maintainable for its recovery as a separate and distinct debt or demand. It is this separate demand as an integer which is the subject of the assignment.” In
Applying these principles to the facts of this case, we must conclude that they do not operate to bar the present action. The final refusal of the defendant further to proceed with the contract occurred on the thirty-first of July, 1888, when the defendant withdrew all his horses from plaintiff’s premises and custody.
III. But we are not able to come to the same conclusion in respect to the third assignment of error. This relates to the measure of damages. Upon this head the defendant requested the court to give the following instruction, which the court refused: “The court instructs the jury that, under the evidence in this case, the defendant had a right to remove all his horses from said premises,' excepting one stallion and three ■mares, at any time he might choose, without in any way being liable to plaintiff for damages for so doing; and, if the jury find a verdict for the plaintiff, in assessing Ms damages they must not take into account any profits, if any, that the plaintiff might have made on any of the animals other than the one stallion and 'three mares, nor should they take into account any costs which the plaintiff may have incurred' in the erection and construction of any of the stables, sheds, buildings or paddocks upon the Kent farm; and, if they find a verdict for the plaintiff, they must assess Ms damages only at the contract' price, less what it would have cost the plaintiff to furnish the best hay and grain and pasture raised on said farm, for said stallion and three mares from August 1, 1888, to June 3, 1890.”'
Instead of this the court gave the following instruction at the request of the plaintiff, the defendant excepting: “The jury are instructed that, if they find for plaintiff, they will assess Ms damages at such sum as they believe from the evidence Ms profit would have been on the keeping of one stallion and the highest mmber of mares defendant had for keeping on plaintiff’s
We know of no principle, which can make the measure of the plaintiff’s damages the highest number of mares defendant had for keeping on plaintiff’s farm at any time from the beginning of the contract to its final breach by the defendant on July 30 (should be 31), 1888. The plaintiff is entitled to recover the damages sustained by him by reason of the defendant not doing what he agreed to do, and no more. The contract was drawn by a justice of the peace, and not by a lawyer, and, hence, its provisions are not as clear and distinct as-they might have been made. But a careful reading of it shows that the defendant never assumed to do more than to furnish to the plaintiff one stallion to be kept at $20 a month and three mares to be kept at $8 per month, making a total of $44 per month. That being the most that the defendant agreed to do, the measure of damages of the plaintiff is the profit that he lost by reason of the failure and refusal of the defendant to do that from the thirty-first of July, 1888, until the period of the expiration of the lease which the plaintiff held under his landlord Kent, — which was the period named in the contract. The damages awarded by the jury appear to be very small when gauged by the theory laid down in the instruction given them by the court, but, as we are unable to discover from their verdict what theory they may have taken as to the
the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.