This is an action for actual and punitive damages for alleged failure of the defendant corporation, as the former employer, to furnish plaintiff, as the discharged former employee, a so-called service letter in compliance with § 290.140, RSMo 1959, V.A. M.S. We will continue to refer to the parties by the designation they bore in the trial court.
The verdict and judgment was for plaintiff for One Cent actual damages and Fifteen Thousand Dollars punitive damages. A voluntary remittitur by plaintiff of One Dollar of the punitive damages reduced the final judgment to One Cent ac *63 tual damages and Fourteen Thousand Nine Hundred Ninety-nine Dollars as punitive damages. The Court sustained defendant’s motion for a new trial and plaintiff appealed to the Kansas City Court of Appeals. The Court of Appeals affirmed the order of the trial court and after handing down its opinion, on motion of plaintiff, transferred the cause to this Court. We determine the case as on original appeal. Civil Rule 84.05(h). (All references to Statutes and Rules are to V.A.M.S. and V.A.M.R., respectively.)
Briefly, the basic facts are: After serving in the employment of defendant as “a cold meat man” or assistant chef for more than five years, plaintiff was discharged by defendant on information that he had taken food out of the kitchen against the corporation’s rules. Plaintiff requested of defendant that he be furnished a service letter in compliance with § 290.140. Defendant furnished plaintiff with a letter stating: “In response to your letter of December 8, I would advise that you were employed by the Kansas City Club October 25, 1954, as an assistant cook. Your employment continued until November 30, 1959, when your services were terminated for infractions of our rules.”
As stated above, after judgment for plaintiff, the Court sustained defendant’s motion for new trial, the order (entered on the 90th day after it was filed) being “defendant’s motion for new trial [is] by the Court sustained for error in giving plaintiff’s instruction No. 2.” The record shows the following entry at the close of all the evidence: “The Court: Let the record show that the Court gives instructions numbered one, two and three offered by the plaintiff, to the giving of which (sic) each of which the defendant duly objects and excepts.” As will be noted, specific detailed objections to these instructions were not made by defendant at the time they were offered. See Civil Rule 79.01. The pertinent portion of defendant’s motion for new trial is: “Because the court erred in giving instructions numbered one, two and three at the request of the plaintiff and over the objections of the defendant.”
In assuming his burden of showing that the trial court erred in sustaining defendant’s motion for new trial, plaintiff contends, first, that because the defendant made neither specific objections to instruction No. 2 before submission as provided in Civil Rule 70.02 nor specific allegations of error in said instruction in its motion for new trial as required by Civil Rule 79.03, the court was “without authority” to sustain defendant’s motion for new trial and defendant is “without right” on appeal to support the court’s order sustaining the motion, and, second, assuming that Civil Rules 70.02 and 79.03 are not applicable, Instruction No. 2 contains no error and the court did not err in giving it.
As to his first contention, in the words of the first point in his brief filed in the Court of Appeals, plaintiff says, “The Court granted a new trial for giving plaintiff’s Instruction No. 2. This was error. The point was not preserved for review.” In his supplemental brief filed here plaintiff contends that Civil Rule 70.02 requires that specific allegations of error must be stated in the motion for new trial to preserve those errors for review by either the trial or appellate court. The Rule does not make the requirement advanced by plaintiff; the rule prescribes when specific objections to instructions need not be made, that is, that specific objections are not required before submission to the jury as a condition to preserving error for review “on after trial motion, or on review by an appellate court, if they are set forth in the motion for a new trial.” Plaintiff contends and argues that the allegations of error in defendant’s motion for new trial as to error in Instruction No. 2 are too general and therefore do not meet the requirements of Civil Rule 79.03; that because the allegations in the motion do not meet those requirements, whether the trial court erred in giving that instruction Is not preserved for review. He argues that whether the instruction was
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erroneous may not now be determined, and that whether the trial court ruled properly that it should not have given the instruction for error therein may not now be determined. We
hold that
neither Rule limits or restricts the trial court’s right to pass on its own errors. Civil Rule 79.03 prescribes, inter alia, when it is necessary that specific allegations of error in instructions must be set forth in the motion for new trial in order to preserve the error for
appellate
review. What was said by the St. Louis Court of Appeals in White v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, Mo.App.,
Defendant’s motion for a new trial was
sustained
and defendant granted a new trial. On an appeal from an order sustaining a motion for new trial it has been said by this Court “that within the limit of the record brought up for review ‘ * * * it is not only our prerogative, but obvious duty, to review the action of the circuit court, and determine from the law and the facts of the case whether the circuit court exercised a sound judicial discretion * * * ’ in granting the defendant a new trial. Merriam v. St. Louis, C. G. & Ft. S. Ry. Co.,
The plaintiff contends that the trial court did not have jurisdiction to sustain the motion for new trial on its own motion more than 30 days after judgment and cites Civil Rule 75.01. The rule is not.applicable here and the point is ruled against plaintiff.
Plaintiff contends that when Instruction No. 2 and Instruction No. 1 are read together it is clear that the court erred in sustaining defendant’s motion for new trial for the reason assigned, i. e., for the giving of Instruction No. 2. The two instructions follow, instruction No. 1 being:
“The Court instructs the jury that if you find and believe from the evidence that plaintiff was employed by defendant as an assistant cook for more than six months prior to his discharge, and that after his discharge, in writing, he requested defendant to give him a service letter, and that defendant gave him the letter identified in evidence as Exhibit 3; and if you find that said letter did not state the true reason of plaintiff’s discharge; and if you find that plaintiff did not violate defendant’s rule prohibiting the removing of food from the kitchen and did not violate a rule of displaying the contents of a package to the food checker on the 14th floor, if you find that either of said rules, in fact existed, then you are instructed that under the law plaintiff is presumed to have sustained nominal actual damages, *66 and you should find in his favor for a nominal amount of actual damages.”; and instruction No. 2 being:
“The Court instructs the jury that if under Instruction No. 1 you find for the plaintiff, and if you further find that defendant acted willfully, maliciously and wrongfully, and without legal justification or excuse, you may award plaintiff punitive damages in such-sum as you may think proper under the evidence to punish defendant for said wrongful act and to serve as a warning to deter defendant and others from committing like wrongs in the future; and in assessing such damages you may take into consideration the net financial worth of the defendant.”
Defendant contends that the giving of instruction No. 2 was error for the reason the instruction did not limit the wrongful act of defendant for which plaintiff would be entitled to punitive damages to the one and only act of failure to state in the service letter the true reason for plaintiff’s discharge; that the instruction permitted the jury to consider as wrongful and malicious another act of defendant (i. e., plaintiff’s discharge by defendant) and assess punitive damages for that act. The instruction is subject to the objection made by defendant and the giving of the instruction was prejudicial error for which the trial court properly sustained defendant’s motion for new trial. See Roberts v. Emerson Electric Mfg. Co, Mo,
Instruction No. 2 submits that the jury may find that defendant acted willfully, maliciously and wrongfully (1) in discharging plaintiff, and (2) in failing to furnish a service letter stating the true reason of plaintiff’s discharge. For only one of these acts could the jury assess punitive damages, i. e, failure to furnish a service letter stating the true reason for discharge, and it seems fairly certain that the jury did not understand that the wrongful act, if any, of defendant was confined to this act alone and that they were not to consider any other act of defendant they might deem wrongful in assessing damages.
Plaintiff contends that instruction No. 2 does not refer to wrongful acts of the defendant as does the instruction in the Roberts case last mentioned. The instruction in the case at bar does not use the plural form of the word but contrary to his contention the instruction does refer to acts for the word “acted”, as used in the instruction, refers to and includes one, or more, acts, when read with instruction No. 1. And that act or those acts may be either his discharge or the failure to furnish a service letter stating the true reason for discharge or both, the first of which the jury may not consider in assessing punitive damages.
In assuming for the sake of argument only that the jury may have considered his discharge as a wrongful act for which it might award punitive damages, plaintiff contends that instruction No. 4 offered by defendant and given invited the jury to consider that act and that defendant’s objection to instruction No. 2 is common to its own instruction. Instruction No.
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4 submits facts which, if found by the jury, would preclude the existence of malice on the part of defendant in stating the reason for plaintiff’s discharge in the service letter furnished him; the instruction does not submit
whether the true reason was stated
as justification for the discharge, but rather whether defendant
had reasonable grounds to believe and did believe
that when the letter was written the true reason was stated. In the absence of malice on the part of defendant in failing to state the true reason for plaintiff’s discharge punitive damages could not be awarded. Franta v. Hodge, Mo.App.,
For the reasons stated, the order of the trial court sustaining the motion for new trial, setting aside the verdict and judgment and granting a new trial is affirmed and the cause is remanded for further proceedings.
All concur.
