176 Mo. App. 608 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1913
This is an action for breach of contract, and was instituted against both the BambrickBates Construction Company and the Bambrick Brothers Construction Company. The plaintiff subsequently.
After the issues were made up, the cause was referred by'consent to Honorable R. E. Rombauer, to try all the issues. The referee duly made report of his findings to the court, recommending judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $2980 and that this amount be decreed a lien on. certain real estate described in plaintiff’s petition, and recommending judgment in favor of plaintiff on the counterclaim of the defendant, Bambrick-Bates Construction Company. The trial court approved the ■ report of the referee, and entered judgment in favor of plaintiff for the sum of $3055.22, being the amount of the judgment recommended by the referee, together with accrued interest thereon from the date of the filing of the referee’s report, and this sum was decreed a lien on the real estate described in the petition; and judgment was entered for plaintiff on the counterclaim of defendant, Bambrick-Bates Construction Company. Prom this judgment defendants have prosecuted an appeal to this court.
It appears that the plaintiff, a Missouri corporation, was a construction company engaged in doing city and other public work, and that, as such, it was a large and constant user of macadam; that prior to April 3,
It appears that the plaintiff did release the railroad company from its said lease, and did assist the defendant Bambrick-Bates Construction Company in obtaining a lease, and that the latter acquired such lease upon said property for quarrying purposes. It further appears that the Bambrick-Bates Construction Company owned and operated three other quarries in the city of St. Louis, and that the said price of $2.25 per square was below the market price of macadam; and that the inducement to plaintiff for en
It appears that the Bambrick-Bates Construction Company, at the time of the execution of said contract between it and the plaintiff, was a going concern and possessed of considerable property; that on or about September 5,1905, defendant Bambrick Brothers Construction Company was incorporated, with like powers and for like purposes as the Bambrick-Bates Construction Company, and did at once absorb and take over all of the assets and property of every nature of the latter company, and proceeded to and did carry on the business of said latter company as its successor; whereby it assumed all of the obligations and liabilities of the Bambrick-Bates Construction Company, including the liabilities, if any, to plaintiff on the aforesaid contract. Such is conceded by learned counsel for appellant in an agreement made before the referee when the cause there proceeded to a hearing.
The petition sets up the salient facts above mentioned, and charges that the Bambrick-Bates Construction Company breached the said contract by refusing to supply plaintiff with macadam for city or other public work at the agreed price and to the agreed amount, upon plaintiff’s demand therefor; that said company discriminated against teams sent by plaintiff to haul macadam from said quarries, giving a preference to teams of other contractors, whereby the macadam on hand was often exhausted before plaintiff’s wagons could be loaded, and that said defendant refused to
It is further alleged that thereafter BambrickBates Construction Company, or its said successor, altogether refused to furnish plaintiff macadam for city or public work, and that plaintiff was compelled to obtain the same elsewhere at a higher price.
Certain real property owned by the BambrickBates Construction Company was described in plaintiff’s petition, which it is -alleged was taken over by the defendant, Bambrick Brothers Construction Company. Plaintiff prays the court to ascertain the amount of its damages by reason- of the breach of contract aforesaid, for an injunction restraining Bambrick Brothers Construction Company from transferring or disposing of the assets received by it from the Bambrick-Bates Construction Company, and that the amount to which plaintiff may be found entitled to recover be declared a lien upon the said real estate described in the petition.
We need not notice the answer of the defendant Bambrick-Bates Construction Company, as to whom the action was dismissed. Its counterclaim, however, remained in the case and was for $514.56. This was upon an account dated December 22,1905, for macadam claimed to have been furnished plaintiff from August 26, 1905, to November 30, 1905, inclusive, amounting ■ to $679.99, less a credit of thirty-eight dollars for “old stone,” and less $127.43 paid by plaintiff. It appears
The defendant Bambrick Brothers Construction Company demurred to plaintiff’s'second amended petition. This' demurrer was overruled and the defendant answered. .This answer denied the allegations of the second amended petition, and averred that on December 22, 1905, plaintiff was indebted to this defendant in the sum of $679.99, and that plaintiff retained out of this indebtedness $514.56 in full payment and satisfaction of all claims and demands against the Bambrick-Bates Construction Company. This answer then set up the very same counterclaim as set up by the Bambrick-Bates Construction Company.
This answer also sets up that the transaction with respect to the lease upon the quarry property was, as to plaintiff, ultra vires; that plaintiff had no power or authority to engage in the real estate business .or render assistance to the Bambrick-Bates Construction Company in obtaining a lease from the railroad. It was also alleged that the contract between plaintiff and the Bambrick-Bates Construction Company “was and is without a consideration to support the same and that said contract is unilateral and void.” The portions of the answer setting up the two last named defenses were by the court stricken' out on motion of plaintiff.
After the motion to strike out was sustained, plaintiff filed a motion to compel the defendant Bambrick Brothers Construction Company to elect on which of the remaining portions of its answer it would stand;
Thus the cause proceeded to trial upon the first count of the second amended petition, the counterclaim of the defendant Bambriek-Bates Construction Company, and so much of the answer of the defendant Barn-brick Brothers Construction Company’as remained after the sustaining of the motions to strike out and to elect directed thereto.
Learned counsel for appellant insist that the demurrer to plaintiff’s second amended petition should have been sustained, and urge this point now before us upon the theory, as we gather from the argument of learned counsel, that the petition wholly fails to state a cause of action. As the argument proceeds, the contract sued upon required the Bambrick-Bates Construction Company to furnish macadam, up to a certain amount per month, at a stipulated price, only for city or public work contracted to be done by plaintiff; and that therefore it was necessary for plaintiff to specifically set forth in its petition the various contracts into which it had entered for city or public work requiring the use of such material. The plaintiff did set forth in its petition that it had contracts for such city or public work, for the fulfilling of which the macadam was required and demanded. By such general allegation the plaintiff sufficiently averred 'that the macadam in question was required and demanded for the purposes mentioned and contemplated in the contract. Manifestly, the petition did not fail in this respect to state a cause of action. ■ At most, the petition could be said only to be vulnerable to attack on motion to make more definite and certain—a matter with which we are not concerned and as to which we express no opinion. And the petition appears to be free from criticism in other respects. It is altogether clear that this assignment of error is without merit.
The other portion of the answer which was stricken out, was a mere conclusion of law, not a statement.of any fact whatsoever, and had no place in the answer.
It is next urged that the trial court erred in sustaining the motion to elect, directed to the answer of this defendant, the Bambrick Brothers Construction Company. We perceive, however, that not only did the Bambriek-Bates Construction Company plead a counterclaim in the sum of $514.56, but that the Bambrick Brothers Construction Company pleaded the very identical items contained in this counterclaim as and for a counterclaim of its own, and further set up that this same $514.56 was paid to plaintiff in full payment and satisfaction of all claims and demands of plaintiff against the Bambriek-Bates Construction Company. The Bambrick Brothers Construction Company attempted to assume inconsistent positions, for this $514.56 could not have been paid plaintiff by way of accord and satisfaction, and also be due and owing from
The above are the errors alleged by appellant to have been committed by the court prior to the case being sent to the referee, and they are, beyond question, without merit. It is unnecessary for us to set out in detail the findings of the referee. A careful review of the evidence discloses, not only that the referee’s findings of fact were supported by substantial evidence, but that they are manifestly correct and that his conclusions thereupon are altogether proper. The record discloses a valid subsisting contract between the parties, and 'that the same was breached by the BambrickBates Construction Company and its successor, the Bambrick Brothers Construction Company. The amount of damages flowing from such breach as found by the referee, and the latter’s finding upon the counterclaim, are well supported by the evidence. Other questions raised need not be noticed. The judgment should be affirmed. It is so ordered.