Central State Savings & Loan Ass'n v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.

30 S.W.2d 774, 224 Mo. App. 573, 1930 Mo. App. LEXIS 54
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 29, 1930
StatusPublished

This text of 30 S.W.2d 774 (Central State Savings & Loan Ass'n v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.) 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
Central State Savings & Loan Ass'n v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co., 30 S.W.2d 774, 224 Mo. App. 573, 1930 Mo. App. LEXIS 54 (Mo. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

COX, P. J.

This is an action upon a fidelity bond. Plaintiff recovered and defendant appealed.

The plaintiff is the successor to the Burton Building and Loan Association. At the time this suit was begun and for sometime prior thereto, the principal place of business of plaintiff was in Kansas City. It had two men acting as district agents at Springfield, Missouri, whose names were James B. Huffman and Eli Ashley Reid. *575 These agents in the course of their employment collected large sums of money which it was their duty to remit to plaintiff at Kansas City. The defendant executed the bond sued upon by which it agreed to pay to plaintiff any pecuniary loss sustained by it occasioned by the fraud, dishonesty or criminal act of any of the employees of plaintiff listed thereunder. Huffman and Reid were listed and covered by the bond sued upon. Plaintiff alleged that these employees converted to their own use money belonging to plaintiff for which defendant was liable under the bond in, suit.

The petition was in two counts. The first count applied to Huffman and Reid while acting together as partners and the second count applied to Reid alone.

The defendant by answer alleged several grounds of defense, which, in the view Ave take of our duty in this case, it will not be necessary to set out in detail. Suffice it to say that plaintiff made a rather clear case on the evidence and defendant produced substantial evidence tending to support some of these grounds of defense.

The trial Avas by the court, a jury being waived. At the close of all the evidence the court gave seven declarations of law asked by plaintiff and one for defendant and refused a number of declarations asked by each party. For plaintiff the court gave the following peremptory declarations of law:

“No. 1. The court declares the law to be that under the pleadings and the evidence in this ease, the finding of the court must be in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant upon the first count of plaintiff’s petition.”

No. 2 Avas in the same language at No. 1 except that it applied to the second count.

The appellant strenuously insists that giving these tAvo declarations of law constituted reversible error. The contention being that the rule as to declarations of law given by a court AA'hen the trial is by the eoiart Avithout a jury is the same as applies to instructions to jixries in trials by them. The respondent contends that in trials by the court the role is different and a peremptory declaration of law by the court Avhen the trial is before the court without a jury amounts to nothing more than an announcement before hand of what the finding of the court avüI be. Each side cites a number of cases decided by the Supreme Court and Court of Appeals in this State to sustain their several contentions and we find that the cases cited by appellant sustain its contention and the cases cited by respondent sustain its contentions, so, as we read the cases, there is an unreconeilable conflict in the holdings in different cases by the Supreme Court on that question. This court, of course, is bound by the latest decision of the Supreme Court and it is our duty to follow it regardless of our OAvn judgment as to the question involved. By reason of that fact *576 we shall review a few of the conflicting decisions of the Supreme Court on the effect of a peremptory declaration of law given in a trial before. the court. As already suggested there are two line of cases by our Supreme Court, that, in our judgment, cannot be reconciled and yet none of these cases.have been overruled, unless it be by implication, for no case tabes any notice of any other case fin conflict with it. The cases which hold that where there is. evidence on both sides it is error for the court to give a peremptory declaration of law in a trial before the court without a jury began with DeGraw v. Prior, 53 Mo. 313, decided at the August term, 1873. The Supreme Court said in that case on pages 314-15: “ At the close of the evidence the court, at the instance of plaintiff and against defendant’s objection, declared the law to be ‘that upon the evidence in this case, the plaintiff is entitled to recover.’ This instruction is manifestly erroneous. It takes the whole case from the jury or from the court sitting as a jury and declares as a matter of law without any finding upon the evidence that the plaintiff is entitled to recover. Whether the plaintiff was entitled to recover depended upon the sufficiency and weight of the evidence in the cause on the two questions to be passed upon. It was not for the court but the jury, or which is the same thing, the court sitting as a jury, to pass upon the sufficiency and weight of the evidence.”

In Crossett v. Ferrill, 209 Mo. 704, 108 S. W. 52, decided February 26, 1908, at pages 706-7 it is said: “The record discloses that the court gave a number of instructions, for plaintiff and defendant submitting their respective theories of the case to the court. In addition thereto, the court gave for the defendant the following instruction :

"7. The court instructs the jury that under the law and the evidence in this case the plaintiff is not entitled to recover and your verdict will, therefore, be for defendant.” This is worded as an instruction to the jury but the trial was had before the court without a jury. The court held that plaintiff had made a prima-facie case and the court ‘should have passed upon the facts -and should have refused peremptory instruction No. 7 to find for the defendant.” The court further said: "The instructions given by the court oh behalf of the plaintiff and the first six given at the request of the -defendant properly declared the law in the ease but the giving of No. 7 for defendant in effect, withdrew all the instructions given for both plaintiff and defendant and peremptorily required the finding to be for defendant.”

“That action of the court was clearly reversible error. . . .”

In Bartlett v. Boyd, 175 S. W. 947, decided March 2, 1912, the contest was over a boundary line between two landowners. The court gave a declaration of law as follows: “The court declares the law to be that the plaintiff has not shown the establishment of an *577 agreed boundary line between the lands of plaintiff and defendant or any part of the same described in plaintiff’s petition and on which a recovery is sought in this case.” The court held that plaintiff had made a prima-facie case and for that reason the giving of this peremptory declaration of law was reversible error and in the discussion of the question, said, "This evidence should not have been excluded from the view of the trier of the facts or dismissed without any consideration as appears to have been done in the giving of the declaration of law. That instruction should have been framed so as to predicate the legal conclusion therein stated upon the failure of the court to find a preponderance of the evidence to support the theory that the parties to the controversy had recognized or acquiesced in an agreed boundary line. . . .

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Related

Saucier v. Kremer
249 S.W. 640 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1923)
Kurre v. American Indemnity Co.
17 S.W.2d 685 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1929)
Kansas City ex rel. Neill v. Askew
79 S.W. 483 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1904)
Chaonia State Bank v. Sollars
176 S.W. 263 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1915)
De Graw v. Prior
53 Mo. 313 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1873)
Stone v. Spencer
77 Mo. 356 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1883)
Crossett v. Ferrill
108 S.W. 52 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1908)
Heynbrock v. Hormann
164 S.W. 547 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1914)

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Bluebook (online)
30 S.W.2d 774, 224 Mo. App. 573, 1930 Mo. App. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-state-savings-loan-assn-v-united-states-fidelity-guaranty-co-moctapp-1930.