Koester v. Lowenhardt

160 S.W. 566, 177 Mo. App. 699, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 76
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 4, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 160 S.W. 566 (Koester v. Lowenhardt) 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
Koester v. Lowenhardt, 160 S.W. 566, 177 Mo. App. 699, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 76 (Mo. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, P. J.

Plaintiff commenced Ms action before a justice of the peace in the city of St. Louis against the defendant, there filing an amended statement in wMeh it is set out that he had entered into a contract with defendant for the removal of Ms (plaintiff’s) furniture and household goods from one house in the city to two others; that defendant had delivered one load of the goods but refused to deliver another at the house designated, hauling tMs load to a vacant lot some 295 feet from destination and leaving them there over night and part of the next day, from which plaintiff himself afterwards removed them; that on account of defendant’s refusal and of his leaving the goods, household furniture, on the vacant lot, exposed to the rain and to a blistering sun, various articles, were damaged. It is further set out in this statement, that by reason of defendant’s neglect to deliver the goods, plaintiff was obliged to hire men to carry them to Ms house and find board and lodging for himself and family for four days; that he had lost three days time in consequence of this, the latter items amounting to a sum of $19.75, the statement alleging that “for wMch plaintiff asks judgment in the sum of $19.75.” The first count, as it may be called, of the statement following this concludes: “Wherefore plaintiff on account of the damage to his goods aforesaid and for Ms lodging, prays judgment against the defendant in the sum of $221.” The further sum of $279 pumtive damages is asked, it being charged that the acts complained of were committed wantonly, negligently and maliciously.

Defendant filed an answer to this in the justice’s court, consisting of a general denial as also of a counterclaim of six dollars for hauling the two loads of furniture.

[702]*702The trial before the justice resulted in a judgment in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $50 and against defendant on the counterclaim. From this judgment defendant appealed to the circuit court, where the case was tried before the court and a jury. At the beginning of the trial, defendant objected to any testimony on the ground, among others, that the amount involved was beyond the jurisdiction of the justice. Whereupon the circuit court permitted plaintiff to strike out from that statement the words, “for which plaintiff asks judgment in the sum of $19.75,” and overruled the defendant’s objection. The trial before the circuit court resulted in a verdict for $175 in favor of plaintiff, and against the defendant on the counterclaim, judgment following. From this defendant, interposing a motion for new trial as well as one in arrest, has appealed to this court.

It is very earnestly argued that it appears on the face of the statement that the amount sued for was beyond the jurisdiction of the justice and that two causes of action, one in contract and one in tort, were improperly united in one action. We do not think that either proposition is tenable. It is true that plaintiff asks judgment for $19.75, for $221 and for $279, a total of $519.75, which is $19.75 above the jurisdiction of the justice. It is true, as argued, that the same cause must be tried in the circuit court that was tried before the justice but we do not think the circuit court committed any error in allowing the amendment which struck out the prayer for judgment for the $19.75. Statements of causes of action filed with justices of the peace are to be construed with great liberality. Parties bringing their actions in those courts are not supposed to be learned in the law and the niceties, of pleading required in the circuit court are not required before the justice. An examination of the items of damages claimed to the goods shows that they total $189.25 ; add to this the $19.75, which is itemized as the amount of expense [703]*703plaintiff was put to in consequence of the detention of the goods, lodging, etc., and it gives a total of $209; add to this the $279 claimed as punitive damages, and we have a total of $488, which amount was within the jurisdiction of the justice in the city of St. Louis. Inspection of the account set out by items in the body of the statement, makes it very’clear that for the goods alleged to have been lost and damaged and fox plaintiff’s expense account he was only endeavoring to claim judgment for $221. That added to the $279 punitive damages asked, makes exactly $500, the amount within the jurisdiction of the justice, so that it seems quite plain from a reading of this, that the outside amount which plaintiff could have recovered did not exceed the jurisdiction of the justice. It is true that plaintiff prayed for this sum of $19.75, and apparently for $221. in addition. Bjut on his account as itemized he could not possibly recover over $209. The prayer for judgment for $19.75' is so evidently a mere clerical error that we think the circuit court committed no error in permitting plaintiff to strike out the words, “for which plaintiff asks judgment in the sum of $19.75,” and that doing so not only did not change the cause of action but left the statement to express what was very clearly in the mind of plaintiff as the amount he was entitled to and for which he was suing. We see no error in allowing this amendment. It certainly was in furtherance of justice and in our opinion did not contravene the statutes or the decisions, which require that the same cause and no other which was instituted before the justice must be tried before the circuit court on appeal. Like amendments have always been allowed in practice in our State.

That count of the petition which seeks punitive damages appears to have been abandoned, not only in the justice’s court but in the circuit court, and as shown by the record in the case, as we read it, is out of the case. No instructions were asked or given on this [704]*704element, but the case went to the jury as one for damages arising out of the breach of a contract. We fail to see that two causes of action are set out.

The learned counsel for appellant very strenuously insists that having recovered a judgment for fifty dollars before the justice of the peace and not having appealed, plaintiff was limited to that amount of recovery in the circuit court, citing for this section 7579, Revised Statutes 1909; Bridle et al. v. Grau, 42 Mo. 359; Gerber v. McCoy, 23 Mo. App. 295. Without pausing to consider whether this contention, which must proceed on the theory that the justice did have jurisdiction, is consistent with the challenge to the jurisdiction of the justice, as made by counsel for appellant, we hold that the section of the statute referred to does not support this claim. That section very distinctly provides that a case on appeal to the circuit court from that of the justice shall be tried anew “ without regarding any error defect or other imperfection in the original summons or the service thereof, or on the trial, judgment or other proceedings of the justice or constable in relation to the cause. ’ ’ This section of the statute has been construed in many cases .and we know of no case which holds that either party •on appeal was limited to the amount or concluded by the judgment of the justice in any manner whatever. It is true that in the Bridle case it is said: ‘ ‘ There was no appeal taken from the judgment of the justice by the plaintiffs, and it may very well be assumed that the excess was remitted,” the court adding, “At all events, they (plaintiffs) seem to have been satisfied with the .amount of the judgment rendered, and the circuit court •ought not to have gone beyond it. ’ ’

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Bluebook (online)
160 S.W. 566, 177 Mo. App. 699, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/koester-v-lowenhardt-moctapp-1913.