King Smith v. Kansas City Life Insurance Co.

164 S.W.2d 458, 350 Mo. 75, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 550
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 13, 1942
DocketNo. 37426.
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 164 S.W.2d 458 (King Smith v. Kansas City Life Insurance Co.) 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
King Smith v. Kansas City Life Insurance Co., 164 S.W.2d 458, 350 Mo. 75, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 550 (Mo. 1942).

Opinion

*79 ELLISON, C. J.

— This appeal by the defendant life insurance company is from an order of the Jackson County circuit court sustaining the plaintiff-respondents’ motion for new trial in a suit for $33,922.68 compensatory damages and $10,000 exemplary damages for wrongful conversion of personal property. Under a mandatory instruction for respondents, eleven of the jury returned a verdict for one cent compensatory damages at the December term, 1939. Respondents’ motion for new trial contained twenty-one assignments. At the March term, 1940, the court sustained the motion over appellant’s exceptions without stating its reasons, in violation of Sec. 1169, R. S. 1939, sec. 1003, Mo. Stat. Ann., p. 1269. Of the twenty-one assignments in the motion seven complained that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence, or was inadequate; and one asserted there was no evidence to support the verdict. The other assignments were directed to other matters.

The-points urged for reversal on this appeal are: (1) the motion was so defective in form that it failed to preserve anything for review; (2) the seven grounds questioning the weight of the evidence were inconsistent with the ground charging there was no substantial evidence, in which situation the latter "erased” or superseded that former, and became the only ground challenging the sufficiency of the evidence; (3) if the motion was sustained on that ground it was error because there was substantial evidence supporting the one cent verdict; (4) since the term at which the ease was tried had lapsed when the motion was sustained, the court had no power to grant a new trial of its own motion (if it did) on the erased weight of evidence assignments; (5) the court' erred in sustaining the motion without specifying its reasons, as required by Sec. 1003, supra. Notwithstanding this last assignment, but in obedience to our decisions, appellant further assumes the burden of showing there was no merit in any of the other grounds set up in the motion, which were concerned with the admission and exclusion of evidence, the giving of instructions and improper argument.

The motion for new trial was as follows: “Now on this 13th day of December, 1939, within four days from the return of the verdict *80 of the jury in this case, come plaintiffs and file their motion for new trial because of certain errors committed by the Court and jury in said trial, as hereinafter set out, to wit: (then follow the 21 grounds). Wherefore on the matters herein, the plaintiffs pray the judgment of the 'court. ’ ’

On its first assignment, that the motion was fatally defective in-form, appellant argues it was merely a suggestion of errors, because it did not ask that the verdict be set aside and for a new trial. The brief cites Sec. 964, R. S. 1939, sec. 812, Mo. Stat. Ann., p. 1062, which requires that “all motions shall be accompanied by a written specification of the reasons upon which they are founded;” also Sec. 1238, R. S. 1939, sec. 1072, Mo. Stat. Ann., p. 1373, which defines a motion as “an application for an order.” It is this latter ingredient which appellant says is missing.

We are referred also to Melenson v. Howell, 344 Mo. 1137, 1141, 130 S. W. (2d) 555, 557, and Lee’s Summit Bldg. & Loan Assn. v. Cross, 345 Mo. 501, 507, 134 S. W. (2d) 19, 22, both of which hold that a motion for new trial performs two functions: (1) assails the verdict; (2) preserves matters of exception for review in the appellate court. The motion in the instant cause, says appellant, omitted the first of these essentials, the assault on the verdict. The third case cited, Maplegreen Realty Co. v. Miss. Valley Trust Co., 237 Mo. 350, 363-5, 141 S. W. 621, 625, held assignments in a motion for new trial directed only against the rulings of a referee, could not be construed as applying to the trial court’s rulings on exceptions to the referee’s report; and that in the absence of assignments challenging the latter, such matters of exception were not preserved for review. Speaking to this point the opinion said the appellant might as well file no motion for new trial at all as not to file a good one.

Respondents dismiss these criticisms as hypercritical and point to cases holding that if the document filed as a motion for new trial was so treated by the trial court, it will be accepted as such on appeal. Gray v. Nations, 224 Mo. App. 27, 37, 23 S. W. (2d) 1080, 1085; Morgan v. Keller, 194 Mo. 663, 677, 92 S. W. 75, 78. While not approving the foregoing as a rule without exceptions, we think it applies in this case. The motion denominated itself a motion for new trial, and it is so styled in the records of the trial court and the bill of exceptions authenticated by counsel for the parties. It did recite it was filed because of errors committed by the court and jury during the trial (specifying them) and prayed the judgment of the court thereon. In the absence of some specific challenge below on the ground urged now, we think it would be unreasonably harsh to hold the motion did not, at least by implication, seek a new trial because of the errors alleged.

On the second point — that the seven weight of evidence assignments were nullified by the no. evidence assignment — appellant cites *81 several cases holding an allegation is self-destructive which charges the act of a defendant was both negligent and willful, or that he was a nonresident and had absented or concealed himself from his usual place of abode in this state. But the decisions stressed are Crawford v. K. C. Stockyards Co., 215 Mo. 394, 402-4, 114 S. W. 1057, 1059, and Gates v. Nichols’ Sanitorium, 331 Mo. 754, 55 S. W. (2d) 424, 426. In the Crawford case the lower court had sustained a motion for new trial on two grounds specified therein, namely: (1) that peremptory instructions requested by defendant at the close of plaintiff’s case and the whole case should have been sustained; (2) that the verdict was not supported by the evidence (which the respondent interpreted to mean, by the weight of the evidence.) This court held that if the second ground meant what the respondent thought, it was inconsistent with the first and must have been incorrectly phrased by inadvertence. Accordingly the order below sustaining the motion on both grounds was treated as having been entered on the theory of a total lack of evidence to sustain the verdict. This Crawford case has been followed in three Court of Appeals cases. *

In the Gates case the motion for new trial assigned error: in the refusal of peremptory instructions at the close of plaintiff’s case and the whole case; and because the verdict was against the weight of the evidence. The court sustained the motion on the ground that “under all the evidence the plaintiff is not entitled to recover.” The opinion held this meant there was no evidence to support the verdict and a demurrer thereto should have been sustained. Then the opinion quotes approvingly part of the Crawford case which points out that if the order of the trial court specifies the verdict was against the weight of the evidence appellate courts will seldom interfere, but if the reason given be that the verdict was unsupported by substantial evidence the higher courts will exercise more firmness — for which reason it is highly important that the trial court clearly show the theory on which it acted.

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Bluebook (online)
164 S.W.2d 458, 350 Mo. 75, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-smith-v-kansas-city-life-insurance-co-mo-1942.