Howard v. Wilson

192 S.W. 473, 195 Mo. App. 532, 1917 Mo. App. LEXIS 79
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 2, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 192 S.W. 473 (Howard v. Wilson) 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
Howard v. Wilson, 192 S.W. 473, 195 Mo. App. 532, 1917 Mo. App. LEXIS 79 (Mo. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

FARRINGTON, J.

The defendant prevailed below, the circuit court having first sustained a motion to strike out a portion of plaintiff’s petition and then sustained a general demurrer' thereto. The petition is as follows: (Formal parts omitted.)

“Plaintiff states that he is and at all times herein mentioned was engaged in the banking bnsines's at Billings, Missouri, and also engaged in farming and stock raising and handling fine stock and that he was and now is owner of a certain bull calf which defendant desired to buy from plaintiff and which defendant priced to defendant and offered to sell to defendant for the price and sum of $100.

“Plaintiff further states that the said calf was on a farm of the plaintiff’s some miles distant from Billings, the home and place of residence of the plaintiff and whereat plaintiff was the cashier of the Bank of Billings, there located, and that plaintiff had a man at the said farm in charge of the said calf, all of which said facts were fully known to defendant.

“Plaintiff further states that thereafterwards defendant wilfully, wantonly and without just case or excuse, acting by and through his son John as his'agent and servant in the matter, called at the said farm in the absence of the plaintiff and obtained possession and control of the said calf from the said custodian thereof, and has ever since retained possession and control of said calf and has wholly excluded plaintiff from possession and control thereof.

“Plaintiff further states that thereafterwards defendant sent to plaintiff a check for $85, endeavoring to purchase the said calf for $85, and thereafterwards plaintiff, seeking to obtain a friendly settlement of the said differences between plaintiff and defendant, made an agreement whereby he was to meet the said John, the said son, agent and servant of the defendant, at the said farm [534]*534from whence the said calf had been unlawfully taken as aforesaid and to confer with said John with a view to a friendly settlement for the said calf.

“Plaintiff further states that plaintiff journeyed to the said farm at the said appointed time and that neither defendant, the said John or any other person met plaintiff at the said farm or elsewhere on behalf of defendant, and that thereafterwards with the purpose, effect and result of provoking the plaintiff to wrath, exposing plaintiff to public hatred, contempt and ridicule and causing plaintiff much humiliation and thereby purposing to deprive plaintiff of the.benefit, confidence and of social intercourse and to injure plaintiff in his good name, fame, credit and standing and injure plaintiff in his said business, defendant uttered and published and caused and procured to be delivered to plaintiff along with another check for $10 a certain writing wherein and whereby defendant intended to falsely charge and did falsely charge plaintiff with dishonesty, which said writing is, to-wit:

‘ Springfield, Mo. Feb. 15,1915.

‘Mr. Howard

‘Inclosed find check for ten dollars to satisfy you as I did not see anything but graft in this matter I did not let John go to your farm Sunday.

‘J. F. Wilson.’

“And thereafter plaintiff returned to defendant his said checks and demanded a return of the said bull calf, which said demand has at all times been by defendant ignored.

“Wherefore plaintiff asks for judgment against the. defendant for his actual damages $1000 and for exemplary damages $6500, and for his costs herein laid out and expended.” (Italics are ours.)

The paragraph which we have written in italics is the part of the petition stricken out.

Appellant now contends that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the petition for the reason that this petition contains not only a count in conversion, but charges defendant with having libeled plaintiff as well.

[535]*535We will dispose of the first contention by stating that there is no count for conversion in the petition. All that is said that is now claimed to state a case of conversion was merely matter of inducement leading up to the charge of libel. The only prayer is for $1000 actual damages and $6500 exemplary damages, and this cer-. tainly was not a prayer consistent with a cause of action for the taking of a bull calf alleged to be worth $100; and though the prayer has been held to be no part of the petition in that the court may very properly hold that a petition states a cause of action although the plaintiff may have mistaken his remedy in the prayer, yet in arriving at the character of the plaintiff’s cause of action it is often helpful to notice the prayer. It is said in Rush v. Brown, 101 Mo. l. c. 592, 14 S. W. 736: “Parties who wish to change or enlarge their demand for relief should do so by amendment or otherwise while the cause is before the trial court, at least in those instances where the case goes off upon demurrer, for the general provision permitting the court to grant ‘ any relief consistent with the case made by the plaintiff and embraced within the issues’ (Revised Statutes 1889, sec. 2216) can have no proper application where final judgment for defendant has been reached on demurrer. In that event the prayer for general relief, supplemental to one for specific performance, cannot, in view of section 2039 (Revised Statutes 1889), be construed as a prayer for a money judgment.” [See also, Pemberton v. Johnson, 46 Mo. l. c. 344; Frye v. Warren, 190 Mo. App. 192, 176 S. W. 289.] On turning to section 1795, Revised Statutes 1909, dealing with causes of action that may be united in the petition, we find that the latter part provides that the causes of action “must be separately stated, with the relief sought for each cause of action, in such manner that they may be intelligibly distinguished. ’ ’ The petition in this case clearly fails to comply with this mandate of the law. [See Pomeroy’s Code Remedies (4 Ed.), pp. 450, 451, 452.] We hold that no defendant on reading the petition in -this ease would be apprised of the fact [536]*536that he would he expected in this suit to account for having unlawfully converted plaintiff’s bull calf.

Appellant’s other1 contention is a more serious one. The cause of action stated in this petition, if any, is based on the fact that .the defendant delivered or caused to be delivered to the plaintiff a letter containing libelous matter and the whole question turns on whether there is ani allegation that there was a publication of this libelous matter. Both plaintiff and defendant admit that in an action for libel there must have been a publication of the libelous matter.

Defendant claims that the mere delivery of such a letter to the plaintiff fails to make a publication thereof sufficient to support a civil action for damages.

The plaintiff contends that under our statutes relating to libel it is a publication to deliver such a letter to the plaintiff and that it is not necessary to allege that such libelous matter was by the defendant shown or pubr lished to some third person, citing section 4817, 4818,4819 and 4820, Revised Statutes 1909. All of these sections, it will be noted, are contained in an article and chapter pertaining’ to crimes and punishments. Section 4817 refers solely to slander, and specifically provides that the slanderous words must have been spoken in the presence and hearing of some person or persons other than the principals. Section 4818 defines libel as a malicious defamation of a person made public by any writing, etc.

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Bluebook (online)
192 S.W. 473, 195 Mo. App. 532, 1917 Mo. App. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howard-v-wilson-moctapp-1917.