Flesh v. Christopher

11 Mo. App. 483, 1882 Mo. App. LEXIS 109
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 28, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 11 Mo. App. 483 (Flesh v. Christopher) 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
Flesh v. Christopher, 11 Mo. App. 483, 1882 Mo. App. LEXIS 109 (Mo. Ct. App. 1882).

Opinion

Baicewell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was begun before a justice of the peace for a balance claimed to be due for painting and glazing defendant’s house, under a written contract. The amount claimed was $5.30. On appeal and trial anew in the circuit court .the judgment was for plaintiff's.

[485]*485The itemized account filed with the justice was • as follows : —

1877.
Sept. 22. To painting, graining, and glazing residence,
as per contract.........$682 00
Oct. 31. Extra work, painting on wire fence ... 3 30
$685 30
Sept. 13. By cash on account.....$400 00
Sept. 28. By cash on account..... 250 00
Nov. 30. By allowance ...... 30 00 — 680 00
Balance due....... .. $5 30

Defendant filed before the justice, as a counter-claim, the following account: —

“For omitting to paint and glaze two windows in defendant’s house, which, by your contract, you were required to paint and glaze........$14 00 ”

There is a great conflict of testimony.

Plaintiffs entered into a contract to paint and glaze defendant’s house according to plans and specifications, for $682. Beinke was the architect and superintendent employed by defendant in the erection of the house. Plaintiffs received several payments on account, on the orders of Beinke. Two windows were, in building the house, omitted from the original plan. When plaintiffs, having, as they claimed, completed the work, presented their final bill to Beinke for approval, Beinke insisted that the windows omitted from the house must be deducted. There was evidence on the part of defendants that it was a custom of the trade not to charge for work omitted, during the progress of the building, from the original plan. The painting and glazing of the windows would have been $14. The bill as presented showed a balance due of $35.30. Flesh claimed that he had done extra work and, according to his [486]*486testimony, it was then agreed between him and Beinke that the extra work should be paired off against the work omitted on the windows. Beinke denies that there was any such conversation. Beinke approved the bill in writing for the balance claimed, of $35.30. Flesh presented the bill so approved to Christopher, who reminded Flesh that he had himself selected and paid for two lights, with which he was charged in the bill. This, Flesh admitted to be an error, and $30 was deducted, leaving the bill as it was filed before the justice, the balance being $5.30, which Flesh swears defendant then and often since promised to pay. Defendant denies that any such promise was made.

The court gave the following instructions at the instance of plaintiffs: —

“ 1. If the jury believe from the evidence that plaintiffs were at all times ready to paint and glaze the two windows mentioned in defendant’s counter-claim, but that they did not or could not paint or glaze the same, because said windows were altogether left out of the building by the defendant himself, or his .architect and builders, without any fault on part of plaintiffs, then defendant cannot recover on his counter-claim.
“ 2. If the jury believe from the evidence that plaintiffs did extra work upon the house of defendant not charged for in the account sued on, that after the completion of the work plaintiffs and the superintendent and architect of defendant agreed that plaintiffs would make no extra charge for such extra work, in consideration whereof defendant would make no deduction on account of the two windows which were not painted and glazed, then defendant' is not entitled to recover on his counter-claim.
“ 3. If the jury believe from the evidence that plaintiffs did the work embraced in the account sued on, that the balance claimed on account of the original contract still remains unpaid, and that the painting of the wire fence is [487]*487reasonably worth the amount charged therefor, then the jury will find for plaintiffs in the amount claimed in their account, with interest from October 4, 1878.”

For defendant the court gave the following instructions :

“1. If the jury finds and believes from the evidence that by agreement between plaintiffs and defendant the painting and glazing of two windows included in the contract as part of the work to be done by said plaintiffs on defendant’s house were omitted, and if the jury further finds that the reasonable value of said work and materials so omitted was to be deducted from the contract-price, then in arriving at a verdict the jury must give the defendant credit against plaintiffs for the value of said work and materials, and if said value exceeds the sum of $5.30, the jury should find for the defendant.
“ 2. If the jury finds from the evidence that there was a custom m relation to omitted work, as indicated in the other instructions of the court, and that two windows were omitted from the house which were included in the contract between plaintiffs and defendant, then the jury should find for the defendant on his counter-claim such sum as they may find from the evidence was the reasonable value of such two windows.
“ 3. -The court instructs the jury, that if the jury believes from the evidence that at the time of the making of the contract for the painting and glazing of defendant’s house there was a general and well-understood custom and rule among builders, architects, and painters, that the value of work included in the contract but omitted in the erection or finishing of a house is to be deducted from the contract-price of said work, then such custom and rule enters into and forms a part of the contract between the parties, with the same effect as if the same were inserted specifically therein.”

1. When this case was here before, the judgment of the circuit court, which was then for defendant, was reversed, [488]*488oil the ground that a transcript of proceedings before a justice had been improperly admitted on the trial. Before commencing this action plaintiff had tiled the same claim, and defendant the same counter-claim, before another justice. It appeared from the docket entries, that after taking-the case under advisement, that justice dismissed plaintiff’s cause of action, and permitted defendant to withdraw his set-off. This transcript was again offered in evidence on the trial now under consideration, and, in connection with it, defendant offered to show by oral testimony that that case involved the same matters in issue here, and that the decision was on the merits. All this testimony was excluded by the trial court. The trial court only followed the former ruling of this court in excluding all this testimony. We have already said that the transcript showed that there was no such judgment as was a bar to the present action. Flesh v. Christopher, 9 Mo. App. 573. Appellant contends that the oral evidence now offered tended to prove that the judgment dismissing the cause was on the merits, that that judgment was irregular, and that, under the circumstances, the justice ought to have rendered a judgment for defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Mo. App. 483, 1882 Mo. App. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flesh-v-christopher-moctapp-1882.