Davis v. Forman

129 S.W. 213, 229 Mo. 27, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 163
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 14, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 129 S.W. 213 (Davis v. Forman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Forman, 129 S.W. 213, 229 Mo. 27, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 163 (Mo. 1910).

Opinion

YALLIANT, J.

— This is a suit in equity to rescind a transaction whereby the plaintiff purchased of defendants 100 shares of the capital stock of the National [33]*33Bank of Commerce of Kansas City, on the ground of fraud which plaintiff alleges was practiced on him hy the defendants. In the transaction complained of the plaintiff gave his note for $31,000' which is now held hy defendant Forman and on which Forman has sued the plaintiff. Plaintiff’s petition specifies the alleged fraudulent acts and prays that the contract of purchase be rescinded and that defendant Forman be enjoined from prosecuting his suit on the note. The answer specifically denied all the allegations of fraud. It is not worth while to here set out the alleged fraudulent acts as stated in the pleadings, because they are the same as the plaintiff’s evidence tended to prove and will sufficiently appear when we come to a consideration of the evidence.

The two suits were by agreement consolidated and tried as one. The trial resulted in a judgment in' favor of Davis, the plaintiff in this suit, and also in his favor in the other suit in which he was defendant. The issues made by the pleadings were substantially the same in both suits. In the decree the court finds the issues of fact for the plaintiff, and adjudges’ that the contract of purchase be rescinded, that the $31,000 note be cancelled, that the plaintiff recover of the defendants the money he paid them on the purchase, and on the note for principal and interest at six per cent, amounting to $12,838.62, less the amount of dividends which plaintiff received on the stock while he held it, and interest thereon at six per cent, amounting to $4851, leaving the amount due plaintiff $7,987.62, for which he is given judgment, and to secure the same he is given a lien on the stock, which the sheriff is to sell and apply the proceeds first to the payment of the $7,987.62, to plaintiff, next to the costs, and the balance to the defendants. The decree disposes of both suits. The defendants Forman and Browning appeal.

[34]*34I. Appellants’ first point is that the trial court erred in a matter of practice in the manner in which it submitted the issues of fact to the jury. This is a suit in equity, and was triable by the court without a jury; even the suit on the note was converted into-a suit in equity by the answer setting up an equitable cross suit and praying affimative relief in rescission of the contract and cancellation of the note. But although the cause was triable by the court, the court had the-authority to take the opinion of a jury on any specific-question of fact included in the issues made by the-pleadings. [Sec. 692, R. S. 1899, now sec. 1969, R. S.. 1909.] At the opening of the trial the plaintiff requested that the issues of fact be submitted to a jury,, and the court ordered that a jury come, thereupon came a jury “duly selected, tried and sworn well and truly to try the issues herein joined and a true verdict-render in accordance with law and the evidence.”' The jury heard all the evidence, but the issues to be submitted to them were not framed until the close of the evidence; then the court framed two issues which practically covered the whole case and submitted them-to the jury to answer, yes or no, as they might find' the facts from the evidence. The verdict of the jury was in favor of the plaintiff on both issues. It was-not a unanimous verdict, ten only concurred therein. In the decree the fact of the submission of the issues-to the jury and the answers of the jury to the questions-submitted are recited, but the court goes on to make-its own findings of the facts and bases its judgment on its own findings.

The record shows that the defendants .objected' in the beginning to the submission of the issues to a. jury, yet they did not except to the ruling of the court ordering a jury, and they made no objection to the trial proceeding in the presence of the jury before-the issues were framed. In open court it was stipulated in writing that: “If any of the issues in either [35]*35or both of said causes be submitted to a jury, all other issues, if any, in either of said cases may be heard and determined by the court at the same time and upon the same evidence.” Thus it was stipulated that whilst the evidence bearing on the issues that might be submitted, to the jury was being heard, the court at the same time was to hear all the evidence on all the issues. Appellants now say it was error to have waited until the evidence was all in before framing the special' issues to be submitted to the jury. Appellants’ theory is doubtless derived from the ancient chancery practice which in this particular was more dilatory and cumbersome than the modern practice under the code.. [2 Daniell’s Ch. Pl. and Pr. (6 Ed.), *1071.] Our statute confers on the court trying an equity cause authority to take the opinion of a jury on any issue of fact involved, but it does not prescribe when the issues to be submitted to a jury are to be framed,, whether before or after the evidence is heard, but leaves that matter to the discretion of the chancellor. It is very good practice to have the jury present from the beginning to the end, so that they may hear all the evidence. And after the evidence is all in, the court is usually better prepared to select the issues on which it desires the opinion of the jury than it would have been before it had heard the evidence. Although a jury may have been impaneled and sworn and present during the hearing of all the evidence, yet if at the end the chancellor concludes that he does not care to have their opinion, he doubtless may dismiss them without submitting any issue to them. After all,, the verdict of the jury in such a case is merely advisory. [Bronson v. Wanzer, 86 Mo. 408; Keithley v. Keithley, 85 Mo. 217.] It has been held that the verdict of a jury in such case is not a subject for examination on an appeal. [Weeks v. Senden, 54 Mo. 129.] The taking of the opinion of a jury is a matter so entirely in the discretion of the chancellor that no [36]*36error can be predicated on the fact that he did not frame the issues to be submitted to them until they had heard all the evidence.

It is also insisted by appellants that the constitutional amendment allowing nine of a jury “in a civil action” to render a verdict does not apply to a case of this kind. Whilst in legal nomenclature it is more accurate to say “suit in equity” and “action at law,” yet under our Code of Civil Procedure, which was in force long before the constitutional amendment referred to was adopted', it is declared: “There shall be in this State but one form of action for the enforcement or protection of private rights, and redress or •prevention of private wrongs, which shall be denominated a civil action.” The provision of the constitutional amendment applies therefore as well to a jury .called by a chancellor as to one in the trial of an action at law.

II. This transaction occurred in St. Louis in September, 1902. At that time defendant Forman was president of the Fourth National Bank of St. Louis and Browning was a director in the bank. Davis was a customer of the bank, that is, a depositor, having at that date about $10,000 on deposit. Davis and Browning boarded at the same hotel, a pleasant social acquaintance sprang up between them, visits and social pleasures were exchanged between them and their wives. Forman occasionally visited Browning at the hotel, and on one of his visits he was introduced by Browning to Davis.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 S.W. 213, 229 Mo. 27, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-forman-mo-1910.