Hackworth v. Zeitinger

48 Mo. App. 32, 1892 Mo. App. LEXIS 57
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 2, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 48 Mo. App. 32 (Hackworth v. Zeitinger) 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
Hackworth v. Zeitinger, 48 Mo. App. 32, 1892 Mo. App. LEXIS 57 (Mo. Ct. App. 1892).

Opinion

Rombattee, P. J.

The plaintiffs are members of a firm composed of four persons engaged in the manufacture of lumber. In April, 1890, the defendant sent a bill for fifteen thousand, five hundred feet of oak lumber to the plaintiffs’ mill, which the plaintiffs agreed to cut and deliver free on board.of cars at a certain switch on the St. Louis & Iron Mountain railroad for $16 per one thousand feet. The plaintiffs cut. and delivered the lumber, and bring this action against the defendant to recover $248, being the contract price of the lumber thus delivered.

The defendant filed his answer and counterclaim, setting up the following facts : He denied any sale of the lumber made to him. He claimed that he shipped for the plaintiffs five carloads of lumber, for which he received in the aggregate $542.23, for which he accounted to the plaintiffs as per a detailed account filed with his answer, which account shows a balance due to him of seventy-eight cents, for which amount he asks judgment against the plaintiffs.

The cause was tried before a jury, who brought in a general verdict in this form: “We, the jury, find the [34]*34Issues for the defendant, A. Zeitinger.” The court upon this finding entered a judgment in favor of the defendant and against the plaintiffs for seventy-eight cents and costs. The plaintiffs filed their motion for new trial and álso in arrest of judgment, alleging as a ground of the latter motion, that upon the whole record the judgment was erroneous. These motions were overruled, and the plaintiffs, appealing, assign for error that the court admitted illegal testimony for the defendant, gave erroneous instructions to the jury, and erred in overruling their motion in arrest of judgment.

Upon the trial the plaintiffs gave evidence tending to support their cause .of action. The defendant thereupon gave evidence to the following effect: He did not buy any lumber from the plaintiffs, but did ship lumber for them from time to time, and had thus shipped from fifty to one hundred carloads. He received orders from third parties, and sent them out to the mill of the plaintiffs who filled them. It was conceded that former orders, thus filled, were filled subject to inspection by the buyers. It was also conceded by the plaintiffs that the account filed with the defendant’s answer was correct except as to charges for culls for lumber, amount of the note paid to Allen, and amount of charges for shortage on lumber. In regard to the first items in dispute the defendant gave evidence tending to show that, when he received the bill for the fifteen thousand, five hundred feet of lumber sued for, he sent the order received out to plaintiffs’ mill; that that order contained upon its face the words, “ subject to inspection; ” that, as soon as he received word from the buyers that certain parts of the lumber were rejected upon inspection, or culled according to the technical phrase, he notified the plaintiffs, and the plaintiffs saw him, and agreed with him as to what should be done with the rejected lumber. On this part of the case the plaintiffs objected to the testimony of the defendant, because it appeared from it that he did not personally know of the condition of the lumber, or [35]*35what part thereof was properly rejected, but testified merely from information. This objection was well taken at the time, and if the evidence had stood alone the reception of the evidence would have been prejudicial error. But, when this evidence was connected with further evidence that the information thus received was •communicated to the plaintiffs, and that they acted upon it and requested the defendant to dispose of the rejected lumber on the best terms obtainable,' the evidence became competent.

In regard to the second item in dispute, the defendant gave evidence tending to show that the plaintiffs •desired to buy certain lands, but, not having the money, agreed with the defendant that he should take the title thereto in his own name, and hold it for the plaintiffs, until they repaid to him whatever he paid on account thereof; that the defendant thereupon paid on account of the lands $100.85, and did take the title in his own name, but that the plaintiffs, upon ascertaining that the title was defective, refused to repay him the money and take the title off his hands. The defendant also gave •evidence tending to show that the shortage amounted to •$4.94.'

When the testimony’touching this land transaction was offered by the defendant, the plaintiffs objected to it as being outside of the issues in the cause, incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial. It does not appear that the objection that this contract was within the statute of frauds was ever raised either by the pleadings or by objection to the evidence on that specific ground, or even by instructions. The plaintiff’s objection, therefore, now made for the first time, that this contract was within the statute, and not provable by oral evidence, even if it were otherwise tenable, must be disregarded. The statute of frauds, to be available in courts of record, must be pleaded (Gardner v. Armstrong, 31 Mo. 535; Maybee v. Moore, 90 Mo. 340), nor can a party avail himself of it in any case, wnere ne has failed to inform the [36]*36trial court that he relies upon it as a defense. Scharff v. Klein, 29 Mo. App. 549. There is no merit in any of the exceptions to the rulings of the court on the evidence.

The court on its own motion instructed the jury as follows: “The court instructs you that plaintiffs in this case sue for fifteen thousand and five hundred feet of lumber, which they claim they sold and delivered to defendant at $16 per thousand, making the total amount claimed $248. The defendant filed an offset claiming a balance of seventy-eight cents due him. The plaintiffs admit the correctness of all the items of credit and debit in defendant’s offset, except the $100.85, paid D. J. Allen on the land transaction; $129.34, for culls or rejected lumber, and $4.94, shortage of carload, ‘making a total of $235.13 of credits disputed by plaintiffs ; and hence it will be necessary for you to determine from the evidence in the cause as to whether these credits are correct or not.’ As to the $100.85 claimed by defendant to have been paid D. J. Allen for plaintiffs, the court instructs you that, if you believe and find from the evidence in the cause that the plaintiffs bought a tract of land in Reynolds county from D. J. Allen for $400, and that, after making the bargain, the plaintiffs and defendant made a bargain by which defendant was to pay said Allen for said land and take a deed from said Allen to defendant, and that defendant was simply to hold the title to the land to secure him for the purchase money, and that, when plaintiffs repaid him the purchase money, he, defendant, should convey the land to plaintiffs ; and that, in pursuance of this contract, defendant gave his notes to said Allen for the purchase money of said land and took a deed to the land to himself to hold the land until he was repaid, and that the $100.85, claimed as a credit, was paid Allen as a part of the purchase money of said land, then you will allow defendant that credit in making up your verdict; and, unless you so find, you will disallow it. If plaintiffs bought the land of Allen [37]

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Bluebook (online)
48 Mo. App. 32, 1892 Mo. App. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hackworth-v-zeitinger-moctapp-1892.