Maryland Casualty Company v. Spitcaufsky

178 S.W.2d 368, 352 Mo. 547, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 518
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 7, 1944
DocketNos. 38616 and 38617.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 178 S.W.2d 368 (Maryland Casualty Company v. Spitcaufsky) 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
Maryland Casualty Company v. Spitcaufsky, 178 S.W.2d 368, 352 Mo. 547, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 518 (Mo. 1944).

Opinion

*551 CLARK, P. J-

From a judgment in favor of respondent, plaintiff, for. $8,355.61 against both defendants, each defendant has taken a separate appeal and has filed a separate brief. There is little substantial difference in the legal questions presented in appellants’ briefs and the two appeals will be disposed of in one opinion.

The original petition filed April 22, 1931, among other allegations, stated that defendants, doing business under the name of Spitcaufsky Brothers, were engaged in a business including the operation of a rock quarry requiring the blasting of rock and other material. That under the charter and ordinances of Kansas City it was necessary, before blasting operations could be conducted in the city limits, to procure a permit from and file a bond with the city conditioned that applicant would carefully use explosives and pay damages suffered by any person by reason of such blasting operations. That on or about February 24, 1926, defendants made -application to plaintiff and procured a blasting bond signed by defendants as principals and plaintiff as surety and procured the necessary permit from the city. That on December 27, 1926, defendants, by the use of material used in blasting, injured one McMullin, a minor. That the minor by his next friend sued defendant, John Spitcaufsky, and obtained a judgment for $10,000.00 and then sued plaintiff on the bond. That the parents of the minor also sued John Spitcaufsky and plaintiff for $10,000.00 damages for loss of the minor’s services. That liability, was unquestioned and plaintiff and another company, which carried liability insurance for the Spitcaufskys, made a settlement of all claims, which required plaintiff to pay the sum of $5,304.93. That to induce plaintiff to execute the blasting bond and as a part of the consideration therefor defendants executed a written agreement to indemnify plaintiff for all payments which it might be required to make under the terms of the bond. Plaintiff asked judgment for the amount it had paid with six per cent interest from the date of payment, Julv 17, 1929.

*552 Defendants filed separate answers. Both answers contained general denials and set np other matters in defense which, so far as preserved in the briefs, will be hereafter discussed.

For some reason not disclosed by the record, although the case was filed April 22, 1931, it was not tried in the circuit court until October 12, 1942. The trial was to a jury resulting in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff as heretofore stated.

While the briefs of the two appellants differ in some particulars the following summary includes the substance of all points made by each of them, to wit:

That the court erred in refusing to sustain defendants’ demurrer to the evidence; in permitting plaintiff to amend its petition after the evidence was in; in giving certain instructions.for plaintiff and refusing certain others for defendants; in making prejudicial remarks in the presence of the jury.

Demurrer to the evidence. The evidence shows that appellants are brothers. Each had been engaged as a contractor for many years. They were not partners, did not do business together and did not contemplate doing business together. John Spiteaufsky testified that he and his brother did not speak to each other for seven or eight years after 1924. In order to qualify for blasting it was necessary to obtain a permit from the city and to obtain such a permit it was necessary to file a blasting bond. A bond for $5,000.00 would qualify a contractor for one job at a given location and a $10,000.00 bond would authorize blasting at any and all locations within the city. There is no evidence that either brother procured an individual blasting .bond and the bond for $10,000.00 upon which respondent was surety was the only blasting bond shown by the evidence to have been filed by either of them. Shortly after this,bond was filed with the city, John Spiteaufsky procured a sewer contract and a blasting permit was issued in the name of ' ‘Hyman and John Spiteaufsky doing business as Spiteaufsky Brothers.” Later the McMullin boy was injured and, by his next friend, recovered a judgment against John Spiteaufsky for $10,000.00 and sued him and respondent for the same amount on the blasting bond. Still later the parents' of the McMullin .boy sued John Spiteaufsky for the loss of their son’s services. On July 17, 1929, respondent made a full'settlement by paying the McMullins $4,500.00 and paying an additional sum for court costs and attorney fees. (The total amount paid in settlement was greater than here indicated, a part of the total being paid by the company which carried the liability insurance.) The application made to respondent for the blasting bond was-signed by John Spiteaufsky and Hyman Spiteaufsky. It bound them jointly and severally- to indemnify respondent for all damages, loss, costs, charges and expenses, including attorney fees which respondent should be required to pay on account of executing a blasting bond and all disbursements which respondent *553 should make in good faith under the belief that it was liable, or that respondent deemed necessary or expedient to make, whether such liability, necessity or expedience existed or not. The blasting bond purported to be executed by “Hyman and John Spitcaufsky, doing-business as Spitcaufsky Bros.,” and was signed “Spitcaufsky Bros, by Hyman Spitcaufsky” with respondent as surety.

Appellants argue that, as the blasting bond was signed by “Spitcaufsky Bros.” and .recited that it was executed by “Hyman and John Spitcaufsky doing business as Spitcaufsky Bros.” a presumption arises that it was intended to apply only to such operations as the appellants might engage in as partners. That, if it was a partnership bond, respondent was under no obligation to pay damages arising out of the individual operations of John Spitcaufsky and the payments made by respondent were voluntary.

■ This argument has some merit if, in fact, the blasting bond is a 'partnership bond, but even the authorities cited by appellants show that no conclusive, or even strong, presumption of partnership' arises by the use of such term as “Spitcaufsky Bros.” or “doing business as Spitcaufáky Bros.” [47 C. J., Sec. 119, Partnership.] Appellants concede that such a presumption is only a prima facie one and one of the appellants further says that the question depends upon the intention of the parties’ as gathered from the entire instrument and the surrounding circumstances.

Nowhere in the petition, the indemnity agreement, the blasting permit, or the blasting bond were the appellants described as partners. There is no room in this ease for any presumption that the blasting bond was intended to cover the operations of a partnership, for appellants strenuously insist that they were never partners and there is no evidence that they intended to become partners or to engage in any joint business enterprise. If the blasting bond did not cover the individual operations of the appellants it did not cover anything, and the city issued a blasting permit to John Spitcaufsky on the faith of a meaningless bond. The indemnity agreement, upon which the instant suit is based, contains no language indicative of a partnership. It is signed by each of the appellants individually, and binds them jointly and severally.

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Bluebook (online)
178 S.W.2d 368, 352 Mo. 547, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maryland-casualty-company-v-spitcaufsky-mo-1944.