Boland v. Dehn

348 S.W.2d 603, 1961 Mo. App. LEXIS 575
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 18, 1961
Docket30683
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 348 S.W.2d 603 (Boland v. Dehn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boland v. Dehn, 348 S.W.2d 603, 1961 Mo. App. LEXIS 575 (Mo. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

DOERNER, Commissioner.

This is an action on an open account for a balance claimed to be due of $2,458.86, which was tried before the court without a jury. Judgment below was in favor of plaintiff and against both defendants in the sum of $138.88, from which judgment plaintiff has duly appealed.

The briefs of the parties present a unique situation. By the first point in their own brief defendants criticize plaintiff’s brief as failing to comply with the Rules, in that (1) under his points relied on plaintiff failed to allege any error on the part of the trial court; and (2), plaintiff’s points are mere abstract statements of law. Defendants’ criticism is well taken. .In the particulars stated, plaintiff’s brief does not comply with Rule 83.05 of the Rules of Civil Procedure, V.A.M.R. However, neither does the defendants’ brief comply with that Rule. Their entire brief consists of only two printed pages — a short statement, accepting plaintiff’s statement of the facts, and their “Points and Authorities.” It is entirely devoid of any argument or discussion, and by reason of that deficiency defendants may be said to have abandoned or waived their own points relied on, including their criticism of plaintiff’s brief. Merrick v. Bridgeways, Inc., 362 Mo. 476, 241 S.W.2d 1015; Matthews v. Truxan Parts, Inc., Mo.App., 327 S.W.2d 28. It is readily apparent from the plaintiff’s brief as a whole that the error claimed is the refusal of the trial court to admit in evidence certain sales tickets offered by the plaintiff. In view of the deficiencies of both briefs, a fair result is to declare the contest between the parties a draw, and, in the exercise of the discretion vested in us by Rule 83.09, to consider the appeal on its merits.

Before doing so, however, one more bit of legal underbrush remains to be cleared away. Defendants’ second point is that the judgment “should be affirmed because it was in favor of the appellant on his cause of action and he is not the aggrieved party.” There is no merit to this contention. A party cannot, of course, appeal from a judgment that is wholly in his favor or one that gives him all he asks for, as was the situation in Turner v. Anderson, 236 Mo. 523, 139 S.W. 180, cited by defendants. But a plaintiff who recovers a judgment for only a small fraction of the amount for which he has sued is obviously an aggrieved party within the meaning of Section 512.020 RSMo 1959, V.A.M.S., and may appeal from such a judgment. Scott v. Parkview Realty & Improvement Co., 241 Mo. 112, 145 S.W. 48.

Having disposed of those preliminaries, we turn to the case on its merits. Plaintiff’s evidence showed that for many years he operated a feed store in Washington, Missouri. Sometime in the early or middle 1940’s the defendants, then husband and wife, who with their two sons operated a farm in or near Washington, requested plaintiff to extend them credit on an open account. Plaintiff consented to do so, and in the following years plaintiff sold and delivered numerous articles of merchandise to the defendants. Orders therefore were *605 given at different times by one or the other of the defendants, or one of their sons, in person or over the telephone. Plaintiff testified that it was his practice to carry his accounts in the name of the head of the family, and that accordingly the account sued on was carried in the name of defendant Frank Dehn. But his testimony made it clear that the account had been opened at the request of both of the defendants, and that from time to time, when the account got “a little too large,” he would talk to both of the defendants about paying more on their account. Over the years plaintiff personally made many deliveries to the defendants. Statements were sent around the first part of each month, and no complaint was ever made by either of the defendants about goods not being delivered. Payment was sometimes made by one defendant, and sometimes by another.

Mrs. Berney Haddock, plaintiff’s bookkeeper, testified that at the time an order for merchandise was given by a customer, the order was written up in the sales book, in duplicate, and marked “charge” if the customer had a charge account. The order was then filled, and the merchandise given to one of plaintiff’s truck-drivers, together with the duplicate copy of the sales ticket, for delivery of the goods and the duplicate ticket to the customer. No receipt was obtained from the customer by the driver, but when the driver returned to plaintiff’s place of business he orally reported the fact of delivery to the bookkeeper. Mrs. Haddock then removed the original sales ticket from the sales book and placed it in a steel filing cabinet, with any others of the same customer. As far as the evidence showed, plaintiff apparently did not keep a regular book of account, so that the only record of the amount due from a customer, and presumably the source from which the monthly statements were prepared, were the original sales tickets. According to the exhibits offered in evidence, credits and payments were credited on a customer’s account either by attaching a credit slip to the sales tickets, or by making an appropriate notation on one of the sales tickets.

Mrs. Haddock further testified that she had received most of the orders from the defendants, and had made out most of the sales tickets subsequently offered in evidence, although some had been made out by other employees of plaintiff; that such original sales tickets were prepared in the ordinary course of business according to the plaintiff’s system of keeping accounts, which she had described; that the sales tickets were true and correct; that statements showing the items purchased during the month, their price, and the balance currently due, had been sent each month to the defendant Frank Dehn, addressed to him at his farm; and that no claim that the statements were inaccurate had ever been made by either of the defendants.

The account on which plaintiff’s action was founded covered purchases alleged to have been made by defendants during the period from March S, 1955, to and including February 1, 1956, totalling $2551.45, and credits and payments thereafter made, the last on February 17, 1958, totalling $92.59, leaving a claimed balance due of $2,458.86. It indirectly appears from the evidence that at some date (probably at the beginning or before that period) marital difficulties arose between the Dehns, and that one of them instituted a divorce action against the other, but what disposition was made of that proceeding is not shown. Mrs. Haddock testified on cross-examination that none of the orders which went to make up the account sued on were given by defendant Frank Dehn, and that she knew he was out of the state during the period covered by the account, but did not know that he was not coming back. Plaintiff’s evidence was that defendant Frank Dehn never closed the account in his name or notified plaintiff that he would not be responsible therefor.

Plaintiff offered all of the sales tickets in evidence several times, but in each instance the court excluded them. While *606 various objections were raised by the defendants, the only reason given by the court for its rulings was that “There is no evidence in the record showing actual delivery of these articles for which you (plaintiff) are trying to collect.” Eventually it was developed from Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
348 S.W.2d 603, 1961 Mo. App. LEXIS 575, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boland-v-dehn-moctapp-1961.