Dysart-Cook Mule Co. v. Reed & Heckenlively

89 S.W. 591, 114 Mo. App. 296, 1905 Mo. App. LEXIS 303
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 17, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 89 S.W. 591 (Dysart-Cook Mule Co. v. Reed & Heckenlively) 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
Dysart-Cook Mule Co. v. Reed & Heckenlively, 89 S.W. 591, 114 Mo. App. 296, 1905 Mo. App. LEXIS 303 (Mo. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

BLAND, P. J.

Such extracts of the evidence as the plaintiff has seen fit to quote in its statement of the case furnish an apology for the abstracts of the record which the statute and rules of the court require it to furnish. While these quotations are meager they furnish a brief history of the case. It appears that plain[299]*299tiff is a corporation and owns a lot on the corner of Olive and Campbell streets, in the city of Springfield, Missouri, fronting eighty-one feet on Olive and running back north one hundred and seventy-two feet on Campbell. In the year 1903 plaintiff employed the defendants (a co-partnership of architects) to draft plans for, and superintend, the erection of a two-story brick mule barn to cover the entire lot, and gave instructions to the defendants about the elevation and arrangement of the barn. Defendants drafted the plans and prepared specifications for the construction of the barn and superintended its erection. It is alleged in the petition that either the plans and specifications were unskillfully and negligently drawn or through the negligence and unskillfulness of defendants in the erection of the barn the plans were departed from to the damage of plaintiff. From what we can gather from the extracts of the evidence, the entrance to the barn is on Olive street through an eleven-foot door in the front wall. Plaintiff’s officers testified that it was agreed and understood between plaintiff and defendants, and that the plans so show (plans not before us) that there was to be a three-inch elevation in the entrance from the outside to the inside of the wall (a distance of thirteen inches) and from the inside of the wall an elevation of six inches in two feet of floor space; that from the terminus of the elevation on the inside it was agreed, and the plans so show, a dead level of floor space twelve feet in width to the rear wall of the building, which space was to be fenced off as a mule alley and to be used for the purpose of showing horses and mules for sale.

It appears that on account of an ordinance of the city of Springfield in regard to sidewalks it was after-wards agreed to increase the elevation in the doorway two and one-half inches to conform to the grade of Olive street. Olive street runs east and west and Campbell street north and south. There is a slope of eight feet from east to west in Olive street in the eighty-one feet [300]*300fronting plaintiff’s lot, and a ten-foot slope or fall to the north on Campbell street in the distance it bounds plaintiff’s lot. It thus appears that the curbstone on the northeast corner of Olive street is the highest established grade point in the street bounding the lot. From this grade point the defendants contend they took the elevation for the barn floor and basement walls with the knowledge and by the consent of plaintiff, and that this was done in order to get the proper height for the basement. On the other hand, the plaintiff’s evidence tends to show that the top of the curbstone fronting the entrance to the barn was the point from which the elevation was to be taken and that the plans show this fact. The basement is sixty feet long and is entered from Campbell street. It apears that the Olive street entrance is thirty inches above the curb fronting the entrance and on account of this elevation it is difficult to draw loads of feed into the barn, and plaintiff’s evidence is that the floor of the mule alley is not level but is on an incline and on account of this incline the alley is not suitable for exhibiting mules and horses for sale. Defendants testified that the plans for the barn were repeatedly changed with the consent of the plaintiff while the basement walls were in course of erection and that these changes were necessary to procure the height of basement desired by the plaintiff’s officers, who insisted on a nine-foot basement, and that these changes were made after a great part of the basement walls had been laid.

The court gave instructions to which plaintiff objected but asked none in its behalf. The verdict was for the defendants.

1. Plaintiff insisted that it was entitled to at least nominal damages but it did not so move the court to instruct the jury and there is nothing in the pleadings (the answer was a general denial) and no admission of any fact on the part of the defendants contained in the plaintiff’s statement of the evidence which would warrant a [301]*301peremptory instruction to find for it. The officers of the plaintiff were the principal witnesses in its behalf and no fact or facts testified to by them or either of them, which would entitle it to a verdict, was admitted by the defendants. In such circumstances the case is one for the jury, although the plaintiff’s oral evidence is not contradicted by any other witness. The interest of the plaintiff in the event of the suit is of itself sufficient to require the submission of the case to a jury. [ Janks v. Glenn, 86 Mo. App. 329.]

2. The court gave the following instructions of its own motion:

“1. The uncontradicted and admitted facts in this case are that defendants are architects and as such engaged. themselves to plaintiffs to draw plans for and superintend the construction of plaintiff’s mule barn. Now by such engagement the defendants guaranteed to plaintiffs that they (defendants) had and possessed the necessary skill and that they would use proper care to draw said plans and superintend the construction of said building in a workmanlike manner, and if they did not possess such skill, or if they were negligent in their conduct in the premises and such want of skill or such negligence caused a loss to plaintiffs in the particulars complained of, then defendants are liable to plaintiffs for such loss.
“2. If you find from the evidence that plaintiffs explained to defendants the elevation they desired for the floor of said barn and of the ‘mule alley’ thereof, and instructed them to place the same upon a certain level, and to have the same constructed on a level plane with a raise of three inches at the door from the curb level in front, and with another raise of six inches at the south end of the mule alley, and if you further find from the evidence that defendant undertook and agreed to cause the floor to be constructed in such manner, and if you further find from the evidence that defendants by any want of skill or by any negligence on the part of either [302]*302of them, caused said floor to be constructed in such manner, and if you further find put to a greater outlay in excavating, and filling, and in the building of walls than they would have been had the floor been placed as agreed upon, then plaintiffs are entitled to recover of defendants the amount of such unnecessary outlay. And if under such circumstances the building as constructed is less valuable than the same would have been if constructed according to such agreement, then plaintiffs are entitled to recover of the defendants an amount equal to such difference in value. It is incumbent on the plaintiffs to prove the facts necessary to a recovery as above set forth by a preponderance or greater weight of the evidence, and unless they have done so your verdict should be for the defendants.
“3.

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Bluebook (online)
89 S.W. 591, 114 Mo. App. 296, 1905 Mo. App. LEXIS 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dysart-cook-mule-co-v-reed-heckenlively-moctapp-1905.