Pugsley v. Ozark Cooperage & Lumber Co.
Pugsley v. Ozark Cooperage & Lumber Co.
Opinion of the Court
This is an action on a written contract for the sale of 400,000' barrel hoops. The petition is in two counts, the first Claiming $511.41, said to be the balance due on 330,000 hoops, the second claiming $507.50, said to be due on account of failure and refusal to accept and pay for 70',000 hoops. The contract given in evidence, in substance, sets out that plaintiff, in consideration of one dollar, to it in hand paid by defendant, “agree to sell” to defendant and the latter “agrees to purchase” from plaintiff, 400,000 six-foot hoops at $7.25 per thousand, and, to quote from the contract, “it being understood that all pay
The answer, after a general denial, pleaded payment and accord’and satisfaction, as well as failure to deliver 70,000 of the hoops of the kind contracted for.
At a trial before the court and jury there was a verdict for defendant on the first count, under the direction of the court, and one for plaintiff on the second count in the sum of $507.50', judgment following accordingly. From the judgment against it, defendant appealed to this court.
We transferred the case to the Springfield Court of Appeals under the provisions of an act of the General Assembly of this state (Session Acts. 1909', p. 396, now section 3939, R. S. 1909). There the judgment of the circuit court was affirmed on the ground that the abstract furnished by appellant failed to show that the motion for a new trial had been set out in the bill of exceptions, or there called for. The opinion of the Springfield Court of Appeals is reported under this same title 154 Mo. App, 386, 133 S. W. 859. When the case was transferred back to this court by the Springfield Court of Appeals in consequence of the decision of the Supreme Court in State ex rel. St. Louis Dressed Beef & Provision Co. v. Nixon et al., 232 Mo. 496, 134 S. W. 538, appellant, by leave of court, amended by interlining in the proper place in
In the abstract of the bill of exceptions this also appears: “Thereupon the court gave and read to the jury the following instructions upon the part of the plaintiff: (See ante, pp. 12-13). To which action of the court in giving said instructions, and each of them, defendant duly objected and excepted, and still continues to except.” Like entries appear as to all the other instructions given at the instance of plaintiff as well as to those given by the court of its own motion. Those given on motion of defendant, as well as those asked by defendant and refused, are referred to in the same way; that is to say, the instructions are not set out at all in the abstract of the bill of exceptions but are merely referred to as being’ found at such and such preceding pages of the abstract. Nolis there any recital that in the bill of exceptions there is any call for the clerk to insert them, as is. done by amendment with respect to the motion for a new trial. Referring to the pages in the printed abstract which are cited, we find, under the heading, “Abstract of the Record,” matter designated as instructions and
Counsel for respondent contend that neither the motion for a new trial nor the instructions are before us and that there is nothing before us to show that any bill of exceptions was ordered filed by that judge or by an order of court.
Taking up these in their ordér, it appears, by the abstract of the bill of exceptions, that by the amendment above noted, made after the case came back to us from the Springfield Court of Appeals, that the motion for a new trial was properly called for to be copied by the clerk in the proper place in the' bill of exceptions. We hold this is a substantial compliance with section 2083, R. S. 1909, and that the motion is properly before us. [Sanguinette v. Mississippi River & B. T. R. Co., 196 Mo. 466, l. c. 486 et seq., 95 S. W. 386.] We know of no ease overruling this. Those cited by counsel for respondent certainly do not. The motion for a new trial and exception to the overruling thereof being duly preserved, permits us- to go into the proceedings at the trial in so far as relates to matters otherwise properly preserved in and by the bill of exceptions.
The point made against the bill of exceptions is not tenable. It appears by the record that it was filed. It appears to have been signed by the judge who was
Turning to the abstract of the bill of exceptions and to that of the record proper, there are matters that are properly before us for review. Thus we have properly before us the action of the trial court in the reception and rejection of testimony. Prom this it appears that the plaintiff introduced no evidence of the market value of the 70,000 hoops. Counsel for defendant offered to prove by the testimony of witnesses present, the market price of barrel hoops of the quality called for in the contract at the place of delivery between the dates for delivery, and to prove by witnesses present that the market price of such hoops at the time and place mentioned was in excess of the contract pricethat there was a strong demand for them at that time and that plaintiff might have sold them at a larger price than the contract price. Objection was made to this testimony on the ground that this contract in evidence was an executed contract, evidencing a present sale, and not an executory one. This objection was sustained and the proof excluded. Exception was duly saved by defendant to this. At the conclusion of the case made for plaintiff, defendant requested the court to instruct the jury that plaintiff was not entitled to recover on the evidence introduced. This same demurrer to the evidence was interposed at the close of all the testimony in the ease and was again overruled. These demurrers and the action of the court thereon and the exceptions of the defendant, are properly preserved in and by the bill of exceptions.
“We are unable to distinguish the contract here, in its legal effect, from that construed by our Supreme Court in Brown v. Trinidad Asphalt Mfg. Co., 210 Mo. 260, 109 S. W. 22. In the case at bar the second count of the petition sets out that pursuant to the
There is evidence in the case tending to show that after the making of the contract or at about the time of the making of it, the agent for defendant, who negotiated the contract, had made some arrangement with plaintiff as to shipments to be made, and that defendant, through its officers at St. Louis, where its principal office was situated, by correspondence, had given directions as to shipping the cars of hoops when loaded. The contract, however, makes no such provision. It is clear and unambiguous in its terms. If it is claimed that the parties by their acts had interpreted the contract otherwise than as written, or had acted on it in another way than as written, that was a matter for pleading’ on the part of plaintiff and he should have pleaded the contract as altered or modified or as interpreted by the acts of the parties under it. He did not do this but without amendment, and over the objection and exception of the defendant, introduced proof of the understanding. Counsel for the respective parties have made many other points which we do not think we can notice for they arise over the action of the court on instructions. These, except those asked for by defendant- for an instruction on the evidence offered at the close of plaintiff’s case in chief and again at the close of the case, are not before us. For the reason above stated, the judgment of the circuit court is reversed and the cause remanded.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.