Brinkerhoff v. Elliott

43 Mo. App. 185, 1891 Mo. App. LEXIS 14
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 5, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 43 Mo. App. 185 (Brinkerhoff v. Elliott) 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
Brinkerhoff v. Elliott, 43 Mo. App. 185, 1891 Mo. App. LEXIS 14 (Mo. Ct. App. 1891).

Opinion

Gill, J.

This action was brought before a justice of the peace, where the complaint was as follows:

[189]*189“ Plaintiff states that defendant had on the twenty-second day of July, 1887, a lot of miners mining for lead and zinc on his land near the town of Aurora in said county of Lawrence, to-wit: — and known as the mining lands of S. G. Elliott, and was superintendent of said mines and had the rules of said mines duly posted in his office, as required by the laws of the state of Missouri, and one of said rules provided that, if it may become necessary to drain the lands by a system of pinups, each miner on said lands shall pay the customary royalty, which was in addition to the royalty due him as owner of the land ; that on said twenty-second day of July, 1887, defendant by his written contract of that date executed by him and others, in consideration that plaintiff would put a pump of sufficient capacity to drain the grounds into the shaft near the west line of lots 17 and 18 for the purpose of draining the said mining lands within the first days of August, defendant agreed that plaintiff should receive a certain pump royalty therein fixed from the lead and zinc ores'in his possession mined on his said mining lands ; that plaintiff on his part has complied with the terms of said contract, and defendant has partly complied and partly failed and refused to comply with the terms thereof, and now owes the plaintiff the sum of ninety-eight dollars and seventy-five cents ($98.75) as pump royalty under said rules and contract on lead and zinc mined on ■defendant’s said mining lands, which said lead and zinc defendant has sold and delivered- to various persons," the items of which fully appear by an account herewith filed, for the amount of which plaintiff asks judgment. . E. H. Bbinkekiiofe,

“Plaintiff.”

The contract referred to in the statement, and which was in evidence at the trial, is as follows :

“Contract for draining S. G. Elliott’s mining lands, made and entered into between S. G. Elliott, F. H. Brinkerñoff and certain miners, to-wit, J. Z. and George [190]*190Taylor, M. O. Turpin, John McGill, L. D. Gardner and Prank Rhea. It is agreed that the said F. H. Brinkerhoff shall have the privilege of putting a good pump of sufficient capacity to drain the grounds into the shaft near the west line of lots 17 and 18 for the purpose of draining the mining lands of S. G. Elliott. Now if said P. H. Brinkerhoff shall put in said pump within first days of August, and drain said grounds, then' we, the-undersigned, agree to pay as may hereafter be specified. Now if the water and mineral royalty, as allowed on said lands shall fail to pay to said P. H. Brinkerhoff the sum of $3 for a twelve-hour run, or $5 for a twenty-four-hour run, then the said S. G. Elliott is to make up said deficiency until in all said deficiency shall amount to the whole sum of $50. After this, if there shall be a deficiency, then Taylors, Turpin and McGill, Gardner and Rhea agree to pay fifty cents a day each for water privileges, otherwise they are to have one wash place for each company free. Weekly settlements shall be made to ascertain any daily deficiency. The pump royalty shall be as follows, on different kinds of minerals : On zinc, $1 per ton; on all lead ores, $2 per one thousand pounds, except on dry bone, which shall be only $1 per one thousand pounds, unless the mineral and water royalty shall fail to pay $3 for a twelve-hour run or $5 for a twenty-four-hour run. In case of a deficiency, said F. H. Brinkerhoff may collect $2 on dry bone, or such an increase between $1 and $2 per thousand pounds as may be necessary to make up said deficiency. Signed, Aurora, Missouri,, this twenty-second day of July, 1887. S. G. Elliott,

“P. H. Brikerhoee.

“ J. Z. Taylor,

“George Taylor,

“M. O. Turpin,

“John McGill,

“L. D.-Gardner,

“Prank Rhea.”

[191]*191Pending the proceedings before the justice plaintiff, on being required to give security for costs, deposited with the constable the sum of $25. On a trial there had, judgment went in favor of defendant. The next day after the trial Brinkerhoff, the plaintiff, settled the costs, by permitting the constable to retain the necessary amount therefor out of the deposit, the remainder being paid over to the plaintiff, and the justice made an entry on his docket of costs paid by the plaintiff. However, within four days after the judgment before the justice, plaintiff filed his bond and affidavit for appeal, and the cause went thereby to the circuit court. The defendant there moved the circuit court to dismiss the appeal, for the alleged reason that prior to taking the appeal from the justice the plaintiff had paid and satisfied the judgment of the justice against him. The circuit court overruled the motion, and the trial was proceeded with in the circuit court before a jury, who found for the plaintiff for the amount claimed, and the defendant brings the case here by appeal.

I. The first point in defendant’s brief relates to the matter last above suggested. It is claimed that the plaintiff, having paid the costs adjudged against him in the justice’s court, was thereby shut out of the right to appeal to the circuit court, and, therefore, that defendant’s motion to dismiss the appeal should have been sustained. We do not assent to this view. Nor do the cases cited sustain any such contention. The holding of those cases is simply “ that a party who has accepted satisfaction of a judgment in his favor cannot afterwards appeal.” Robards v. Lamb, 76 Mo. 192; Cassell v. Fagin, 11 Mo. 207; Houck v. Swartz, 25 Mo. App. 20. And a further case, that might have been cited, is Waddingham v. Waddingham, 27 Mo. App. 607. In all of these, the party appealing had judgment in the lower court for some amount, and had enforced such judgment by collecting and accepting such award, and subsequently complained of such judgment in the appellate [192]*192court, although such appellant had previously received and enjoyed the proceeds thereof. By enforcing thv> judgment in his favor — enjoying the fruits which accrue from it — it is said, “the same becomes satisfied, and the appellant releases any errors which may have been committed in rendering it.” State v. Lubke, 15 Mo. App. 166. In the case we have here, the plaintiff recovered nothing before the justice, and received nothing. He was, during the course of the litigation, adjudged to pay certain costs, and did pay them ; and we know of no rule of law that would, on that account, deny him the right of appeal. Thei’e is no question but that a litigant may, during the progress of the suit, pay his costs ; and at the end of the controversy, if judgment be rendered in his favor, he will be entitled to z-ecover of the adverse party “his costs thus laid out and expended, and have execution therefor.”

II. In a review of the court’s instructions, given at the instance of plaintiff, we discover substantial error. By the terms of the written contract, plaintiff Brinkerhoff obliged himself to put in “agood pump of sufficient capacity to drain the grounds” of defendant Elliott, and that “ he would drain said grounds,” in consideration whereof he, the said Brinkerhoff, was to be paid certain amozznts,, etc. Here is a definite and clear undertaking by the plaintiff to drain the water from Elliott’s mining lands, — not that a part should be drained, or that all should be partially

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 Mo. App. 185, 1891 Mo. App. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brinkerhoff-v-elliott-moctapp-1891.