19 Mo. 556 | Mo. | 1854
In this case, the question to be determined was merely a question of fact. The plaintiff' claimed for services end attendance rendered to defendant on a journey from San Francisco to St. Louis, and for money expended for the use of the defendant. With the petition and as a part of it, is filed an account, in which the money alleged to have been expended by the plaintiff for the use of the defendant, appears to have been expended in defraying the personal expenses of the plaintiff on the journey home. The answer denied that the defendant was indebted to the plaintiff for any one of the items stated in his petition. The question on the trial was, whether the plaintiff had engaged, in consideration of advances made to him in California by the defendant, to attend upon the defendant on the homeward journey without charge. This was the question put to the jury by the only instruction given by the court. The instructions asked by the plaintiff, and refused by the court, were rightly refused, as they were intended to hold the defendant liable to the plaintiff, notwith