Maack v. Schneider

51 Mo. App. 92, 1892 Mo. App. LEXIS 396
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 9, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 51 Mo. App. 92 (Maack v. Schneider) 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
Maack v. Schneider, 51 Mo. App. 92, 1892 Mo. App. LEXIS 396 (Mo. Ct. App. 1892).

Opinion

Thompson, J.

The defendant appeals from a judgment against him in the sum of $500, recovered by the plaintiff for services as 'architect and superintendent. In order to a clear understanding of this case it seems necessary to set out the pleadings. The petition is as follows:

[93]*93“Now comes the plaintiff, and for cause of action, says that heretofore, to-wit, on the twenty-fourth day of May, 1887, in the city of St. Louis, he agreed, at the special instance and request of the defendant, to render his services to defendant as an architect, in forming and drawing the plans and specifications and detail drawings, and in superintending the erection of seven houses proposed to he erected by defendant' on Park and Jefferson avenues, in the said city; that, pursuant to said agreement, plaintiff did form and draw. the plans and specifications and detail drawings for said seven proposed houses, and did deliver them to defendant, who did then and theré approve and accept them; that thereafter three of said seven houses were erected on the general plans and specifications so formed and drawn by plaintiff; that the plaintiff also superintended their erection; that plaintiff was paid in full for all services rendered in drawing the plans, specifications and details, and in superintending the erection of said three houses; that the defendant has never erected the said remaining four houses; that defendant has never paid plaintiff for his services in forming and drawing the plans, specifications and details for said proposed four houses; that the reasonable cost of said houses, if erected on the plans formed and drawn by plaintiff, and approved and accepted by defendant, would be $20,000. ■ Plaintiff further says that he has ever stood ready and willing to render his services to defendant in superintending the erection of said four remaining proposed houses, but defendant has wholly failed, neglected and refused to erect them. Plaintiff further says that the reasonable value of his services in forming and drawing the plans and specifications and detail drawings of said four remaining proposed houses is three and one-half per cent., calculated on the cost of their erection; .that a-reasonable charge for superin[94]*94tending their erection would be one and one-half per ■cent, of the cost of their erection. Plaintiff further says that the defendant then and there promised to pay him the reasonable value of his services (to-wit, $1,000), rendered and to be rendered on said proposed four houses, but has wholly neglected and refused to do •so, to the damage of plaintiff in the sum of $1,000, for which sum, together with interest and costs of suit, he ■prays judgment against defendant. ’ ’

The answer is as follows:

“Defendant, for answer to plaintiff’s petition, ■denies generally all the allegations of said petition.
“Further answering, the defendant alleges that on November 3, 1888, and after the times alleged in plaintiff’s petition he, said defendant, paid plaintiff $136.41, in full of all demands of plaintiff against defendant; that said payment was accepted by plaintiff on said November 3, 1888, in full of all his demands against defendant, real or pretended; and that, by reason of the premises and of the payment aforesaid, the defendant is entitled to judgment discharging him from all .further liability on any account whatsoever to plaintiff. ”

To this answer the plaintiff filed the following reply:

“Now at this day comes plaintiff, and, for reply to the new matter in defendant’s answer, denies that the same is true, and further says that the money paid on .November 3, 1888, as therein alleged, was the balance ■due for the services rendered on the three houses actually erected, as alleged in the petition.”

By these pleadings the plaintiff affirms the proposition of fact that, at the request of the defendant, the plaintiff made certain plans, specifications and details, for seven houses to be erected by the plaintiff, tlvree ■only of which the plaintiff erected, and that the defendant has paid him for making such plans, specifications and details, in respect of three houses, and [95]*95■also for Ms services in superintending their erection, but has not paid him for making the plans, specifications and details of the other four which defendant has not erected, and has not paid him for what he would have made in superintending their erection. By "these pleadings the defendant sets up a settlement in full between the plaintiff and the defendant of all demands alleged in the petition, and the plaintiff controverts the fact of this settlement,. and alleges that it was only a settlement for Ms services rendered in connection with the three houses which were erected.

The plaintiff’s evidence, consisting of his own testimony alone, tended to support his propositions of fact, both as to the rendition of the services and their reasonable value, — except that it ■ does not support, under principles of law, a recovery for what he would have made as superintendent had the defendant erected "the four other buildings, and had the plaintiff superintended their erection. But this is immaterial, because it is quite clear that the verdict, which the jury rendered in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $500 does not include this element of damage.

The defendant in his testimony admitted that he employed the plaintiff to make drawings and specifications for seven houses to be by him erected, as stated in the petition, but with this qualification, that all seven of the houses were not to cost more than from $15,000 to $18,000; and he testified that, when these plans were submitted to him, involving an expenditure of from $36,000 to $40,000, he informed the plaintiff that those were not the kind of houses which he wished to erect, and that he could not erect so expensive a collection of houses for want of money. But the defendant admits that he did erect three of them at a cost of something in excess of $16,000, and that he settled with the plaintiff and paid him on the basis of a fee of five per [96]*96cent, for Ms services in connection with these three houses, allowing him for some additional expenditures, which settlement the defendant claims the plaintiff accepted as a settlement in full of all to that date in respect of all the houses. The plaintiff’s evidence on the other hand tended to show that the settlement was merely a settlement for his services in connection with the three houses which were built, and that the payment for services in connection with the other four houses was by express agreement postponed with the understanding that those houses would be built; that the plaintiff would have the superintending of the building of them, and that he would wait a “reasonable time” for the defendant to enter upon the work of building; and the plaintiff having waited four and a half years concluded that this “reasonable time” had more than elapsed and brought this action.

Substantially what took place at this settlement is detailed in the evidence, on the one side by the plaintiff himself, and on the other by the wife and two sons of the defendant. The evidence shows without dispute that, on the third day of November, 1888, the plaintiff presented at the house of the defendant the following bill, the defendant being at that time absent in Europe:

St. Louis, November 2, 1888.
Mr. Ph. W. Schneider, To M. Maach, Dr.,

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Bluebook (online)
51 Mo. App. 92, 1892 Mo. App. LEXIS 396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maack-v-schneider-moctapp-1892.