Hespos v. Winkelmeyer
Hespos v. Winkelmeyer
Opinion of the Court
— This is a suit by appellant, plaintiff, against respondents for contribution, on the ground of the joint liability of plaintiff and defendants upon a promissory note for $1000, judgment upon which note had been rendered in the circuit court upon a stipulation signed by the holder of the note, the plaintiff in that suit on the one side, and by appellant and respondents herein on the other side. Execution issuing on the judgment, levy was made alone upon the property of the plaintiff to pay the whole of it, which he, or someone in his behalf did, and these defendants failing to pay this plaintiff their proportionate shares, two-thirds, as he claimed, he brought this suit, as one in equity, for contribution. The petition, setting out the execution of the note by the three parties, the rendition of the judgment against them and the payment of it by plaintiff here under the execution . levied against his property, prays that an adjustment of the joint liability on the judgment between plaintiff and the defendants upon the basis of an equal division between the appellant and both the respondents be had, if both are financially responsible, or between
The joint answer of the defendants, after denying the allegations of the petition, sets np that the money for which the joint note was given and upon which the judgment was rendered was really borrowed for the appellant alone and used by him for his own purposes.
A general denial by way of reply was filed to this new matter in the answer.
The cause was tried before the court as in equity. The only witness whose testimony .was heard in the case was that of plaintiff himself. After making formal proof of the judgment and of the issue of the execution and satisfaction of it and introducing the note in evidence signed by plaintiff and the two defendants, plaintiff, testifying in chief, gave his version of the circumstances under whch he claimed the note in question, had been executed by him and the defendants. He testified, in effect, that the note was executed in contemplation of the organization of a corporation by him and defendants for the manufacture and sale of washing machines; that a contract to this effect was entered into between them, the exact terms of which are not in evidence, but that the corporation was never organized. He further testified that when the note was executed, defendants were engaged in selling these washing machines, which he was manufacturing for them; that defendants needed funds in this business and the $1000 represented in the note was borrowed solely for the benefit of the two defendants, Winkelmeyer and Meyer, and that he (plaintiff) was merely an accommodation maker on the note, having negotiated for the money with the lender, who required him to sign the note with the other two parties as makers. In testifying plaintiff admitted that he had himself received and paid out all of this $100t) raised on this note but he testified that it was done for and
Letters were introduced and read in evidence written by plaintiff, from which it appeared that he, while nominally the bookkeeper of the partnership composed of the two defendants, in point of fact controlled the action of Meyer, who under the articles of partnership between Meyer and. Winkelmeyer was the salesman for the firm, these letters indicating, that plaintiff exercised complete authority over Meyer as to his sales, movements, commissions, compensation, etc., but in no manner asserting any interest in the partnership by plaintiff. These facts developing, counsel for defendants suggested to the court that the proof, as made by plaintiff’s own testimony, developed and showed an entirely different cause of action than that stated in the petition. They claimed that the cause of action stated in the petition was clearly one for contribution, upon the allegation as to the joint liability of the plaintiff and defendants on the note, and the alleged right of plaintiff to have the defendants contribute proportionately to the payment of the judgment on the note, while plaintiff’s own testimony showed that his cause of action, if any, should be for the entire amount of the note, interest, etc., as money borrowed by him and defendants, but entirely for the benefit of defendants and paid out by him for these defendants. As appears by the abstract of the record of the proceedings at the trial, the court adopted this position taken by counsel for defendants. Quoting the language of counsel for plaintiff in his brief filed, “upon the trial the court took the position that the appellant, by his own testimony, indicated that, instead of having been borrowed for their joint
Learned counsel for appellant make two propositions : First, that a court of equity has jurisdiction, at the suit of those parties to a joint liability who have discharged to the obligee the whole liability, to bring in those who have not contributed their share and to require them to make contribution and to make an amicable adjustment of the burden among the parties and settle the whole controversy in one suit. Second, that the judgment rendered in the Knabner suit, that is the suit on the note, with the further evidence that
Taking np this second proposition, it may be conceded to be true. If plaintiff had closed his case there he would have thrown upon defendants the onus of overcoming it. He did not choose to do this, however, hut in the language of the abstract prepared and filed with us by his counsel, “anticipating the defenses raised by the answer of the defendants, the witness fplaintiff) testified.” Whereupon followed the testimony by plaintiff himself which the learned trial court held disclosed a state of facts utterly inconsistent with those stated as the cause of action and which really disproved those averments.
The authority cited for the first proposition by' counsel for appellant is Dysart et al. v. Crow et al., 170 Mo. 275, 70 S. W. 689. It is said in that case (l. c. 280), that the real point in dispute in the case was whether a court of equity has jurisdiction, at the suit of some of the parties to a joint liability, who have discharged the whole burthen, to bring in the others to require them to make contribution and to effect an equitable adjustment of the burthen and settle the whole controversy in one suit. Plaintiff’s petition, in the Dysart case, was bottomed on the theory that a court of equity has that jurisdiction, the defendants contending that the plaintiff’s only remedy was at law. Judge Valliant delivering the opinion of the court, holds that such a cause of action, one seeking contribution, is more effectually dealt with by a court of chancery than by one at law.
The opinion and decision in the Dysart case falls far short of holding that under the guise of a suit for contribution, a plaintiff can recover for a claim which he has against the defendant or defendants for money paid out by him solely on account of defendants, the obligation to repay all of it to plaintiff resting on de
Learned counsel for appellant argues that one has a right to bring his action for less than he is entitled to recover. That is unquestioned, but does not meet this case. The petition proceeds on the theory that the relations between plaintiff and defendants were such that on payment of the joint debt by one, that one has a right of contribution from the others. The petition has no other aspect or theory; it seeks contribution; a right enforcible at law or in equity (Dysart v. Crow, supra), and here plaintiff proceeds in equity. In the case at bar plaintiff’s own testimony conclusively proves that there is no right of contribution involved; no equities to be adjusted between the parties. His is a case, as proved by his own testimony, of money paid out by him, not for the use of himself and others, but. solely for those others; in short, his cause of action proved is one where the money advanced by him, if recoverable at all, is recoverable solely in. an action at law. His case as pleaded, is one in equity, for contribution. It has .long since been settled in our state that a -party cannot sue on one cause of action and recover on another. That is what plaintiff here seeks to do and the learned trial court very correctly held that he could not do so; could not maintain this suit. In this we think that court was right. The judgment should be and is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.