Klingenberg Son v. Davis

268 S.W. 99, 219 Mo. App. 1, 1925 Mo. App. LEXIS 91
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 19, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 268 S.W. 99 (Klingenberg Son v. Davis) 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
Klingenberg Son v. Davis, 268 S.W. 99, 219 Mo. App. 1, 1925 Mo. App. LEXIS 91 (Mo. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

TRIMBLE, P. J.

Plaintiffs sued defendant on a petition in eighteen counts, for loss of grain in as many shipments. The counts are similarly stated, each one setting forth a separate and distinct cause of action *3 for damages for loss of, or failure to deliver, a certain amount of grain named in the count. The shipments were in different cars, moving on different dates, some to one destination and some to others. All of the shipments originated at Concordia, Missouri, and counts 1 to 12, both inclusive, were destined to Sikeston, Misouri; counts 13 and 14 were on shipments destined to St. Louis, Missouri; all of the foregoing being intrastate shipments ; counts 16, 17 and 18 were shipments in interstate commerce, the first of the said three being destined to New Orleans, Louisiana, and the other two to Chester, Illinois. Count 15 was dismissed.

Each count, after stating that plaintiffs were in the general grain business and that defendant was a common carrier for hire, alleged that on a-certain date plaintiffs delivered to defendant at Concordia, Missouri, for transportation to the destination named a certain number of pounds of grain which defendant accepted and placed in ‘a certain numbered car, but thereafter defendant delivered to plaintiffs a certain specified less number of pounds, and failed, neglected and refused to deliver the balance, which balance was of a specified value, whereby plaintiffs were damaged in that amount; and the petition, at its close, prayed judgment for the total of all the amounts of damage thus stated, to-wit, $569.39.

The answer was a general denial of the allegations in each and every count.

The case came up for trial at the November term, 1921, of the circuit court of Jackson county, Missouri, when the court, of its own motion and over the objections of the defendant, ordered that the case be referred to a referee to hear the testimony and report his findings of fact and conclusions of law in thirty days.

Within three days, and at the same term, defendant filed motion to set aside the order of reference, which was overruled, and defendant obtained and filed a term bill of exceptions preserving the exceptions made to the court’s orders in the entire matter.

*4 A hearing was had before the referee and his report was filed November 2, at the September term, 1922. In it the referee reported his findings on each of the eighteen counts, except the fifteenth which was dismissed by the plaintiffs during the hearing, and the referee stated therein that the “defendant is indebted to plaintiffs on the facts as set forth in all of said counts in the total sum of $550.11.”

At the same term, the defendant filed objections to said report, which the court at the November term, December 20, 1922, overruled, and, upon confirming the report, rendered judgment for plaintiffs in the sum of $550.11. The defendant thereupon appealed.

At the hearing before the referee the defendant objected to the introduction of any testimony because the court had no power to order a compulsory reference. Defendant also objected at said hearing to certain testimony deemed incompetent, and at the close of the hearing objected to any finding against defendant.

Section 1426, Revised Statutes 1919, provides that where the parties do not consent, the court upon the application of either party, or upon its own motion, may direct a reference in the following cases, (1) “where the trial of an issue of fact shall require the exámination of a long account on either side;” (2) “where the taking of an account shall be necessary for the information of the court, before judgment;” (3) “where a question of fact other than upon the pleadings shall arise upon motion or otherwise, in any stage of the action.” Manifestly, thé case at bar can come, if at all, only under the first of the above-named instances, that is to say, only on the theory that the claims embodied in the above-mentioned counts constituted a “long account” within the meaning of the statute, the examination of which was required by a trial of the issues involved. It is well settled that no case can be referred without consent unless it is expressly authorized by the statute. [Thornton v. Life Assn. of America, 7 Mo. App. 544.] The case must fall clearly within the letter and principle of the statute, before it can be thus *5 referred. [Creve Coeur, etc., Ice Co. v. Tamm, 138 Mo. 385, 390.] And in this last-cited case it is held, quoting Ittner v. St. Louis Exposition Co., 97 Mo. 561, 567, that “an account is a detailed statement of the mutual demands in the nature of a debit and credit between parties, arising out of contract or some fiduciary relation.” And that “an itemized claim for damages growing out of a breach of a contract was properly referred.” (Italics ours.)

It will he observed that the petition does not allege a contract, but merely states separately in each count, the facts out of which defendant’s common-law duty arose, the breach thereof, and the damages arising therefrom, and, therefore, each count stated a separate cause of action ex delicto. [Heil v. St. Louis, etc., R. Co., 16 Mo. App. 363, 367; Clark v. St. Louis, etc., R. Co., 64 Mo. 440, 443, 446; Merritt Creamery Co. v. Atchison, etc., R. Co., 128 Mo. App. 420, 422, 425; Wernick v. St. Louis, etc., R. Co., 131 Mo. App. 37, 39; Meade v. Missouri, etc., R. Co., 183 Mo. App. 353.]

It is furthermore well settled that an action for damages in tort cannot he compulsorily referred. [Foster v. Missouri, etc., R. Co., 143 Mo. App. 547, 551; Ittner v. St. Louis Exposition Co., 97 Mo. 561, 567; Martin v. Hall, 26 Mo. 386, 389; Reed v. Young, 248 Mo. 606, 614-615.]

Moreover, we are unable to see wherein the trial of each of the separate causes of action in the petition involved the examination of a “long account” as that term is used in the statute. The counts are not based on contract, the damages are not liquidated, no items either of debit or credit are to he applied, and no long account is to he examined. Each count set up a separate and complete transaction, a separate suit, distinct in itself and involving only the question of the shipment of the amount of grain claimed and whether or not the amount thereof was delivered and the value of that not delivered. The fact that eighteen counts of this character were joined in one petition would not create an ac *6 count, within the meaning of the statute, certainly not out of that which in its very nature is not an account. Nor would the determination of the issues raised in each count involve the examination of an account as the basis of the suit. In the case of Creve Coeur Ice Co. v. Tamm, 138 Mo. 385, the case was based on a contract to furnish ice during the year, in which defendant was to furnish a specified number of tons per month. The pleadings alleged that certain ice was furnished, but that during other months it was not furnished, and a statement in the form of an account was appended to the petition.

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Bluebook (online)
268 S.W. 99, 219 Mo. App. 1, 1925 Mo. App. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klingenberg-son-v-davis-moctapp-1925.