McDonald v. Redemeyer

198 S.W. 483, 197 Mo. App. 630, 1917 Mo. App. LEXIS 191
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 6, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 198 S.W. 483 (McDonald v. Redemeyer) 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
McDonald v. Redemeyer, 198 S.W. 483, 197 Mo. App. 630, 1917 Mo. App. LEXIS 191 (Mo. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

ALLEN, J.

Plaintiff is the widow of George McDonald, deceased, who departed this life on August 14, 1912, and sues as administratrix of his estate. The action is upon two promissory notes executed by the defendant to the order of said George McDonald, one in the sum of $2000, of date August 27, 1911, bearing five per cent, interest, and the other in the sum of $1000, of date October 1, 1911, bearing six per cent, interest. The petition is in the usual form.

The answer admits that plaintiff is the administratrix of the said estate, but denies each and every other allegation of each count of the petition. The defendant then sets up two counterclaims.

For" his first counterclaim defendant alleges that on various specific dates set out, commencing with August 3, 1907, and ending with July 31, 1912, defendant, at the special instance and request of said George McDonald, furnished the latter for use in his business a horse and buggy, the reasonable value of the use thereof being $3 per day. Judgment is prayed for $906.

The second counterclaim is for one-half of the profits alleged to have been realized in a transaction in which', it is alleged, McDonald furnished the money for purchasing certain real estate for future sale, upon the agreement with defendant that the profits should be equally divided between McDonald and defendant. Judgment is prayed for $1387.83.

The cause was tried before the court and a jury, and at the close of all the evidence in the case the [633]*633court, at plaintiff’s request, directed a verdict for plaintiff upon the two notes sued upon, and likewise directed a verdict for plaintiff, on defendant’s first counterclaim. The second counterclaim was given to the jury under an instruction offered by defendant together with an instruction (on the credibility of witnesses and the weight to be given to their testimony) given by the court of its own motion.

The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff on the notes and for plaintiff on both' of defendant’s counterclaims, and from a judgment duly entered thereon the defendant prosecutes this appeal.

I. The first assignment of error relates to the action of the court, at the opening of the trial below, in denying the defendant the right to “open and close the case.” The" record discloses that at the beginning of,the trial, after the pleadings had been read to the jury, but prior to the reception of any evidence, the following colloquy took place:

“Mr. Kinealy (defendant’s counsel): We have the opening and closing of the case.

“Mr. Taylor (plaintiff’s counsel): If Judge Kinealy will make the admission that the notes were issued by Redemeyer and he received the money, I 'will agree to that. Defendant having read the answer to the jury and denied the execution of the notes and the receipt of the money, is not entitled to the opening and closing of the case unless he admits before the jury that the notes were issued by Redemeyer and the money received by them.

“Mr. Kinealy: Our position is, on the record in this case, on the pleadings, we' are entitled to open and close, if your Honor please, and I will ask the right to open and close the case.

“The Court: Without making that admission?

“Mr. Kinealy: We claim the right on the record.

“The Court: It will be overruled:”

. Defendant excepted to the court’s ruling. Thereupon plaintiff, Margaret McDonald, was called as a witness. She identified the defendant’s signature upon the [634]*634notes and they were offered in evidence. She also testified that after the death of her husband defendant repeatedly promised to pay the notes. On cross-examination she was questioned regarding defendant’s counterclaims, concerning which she then testified further on redirect examination. ' Plaintiff thereupon rested, and defendant proceeded with his evidence in support of his counterclaim. Plaintiff later put on evidence to rebut that offered by defendant.

After the giving of the instructions mentioned, the case went to the jury on defendant’s second counterclaim, as stated above, without any request by defendant’s counsel to be allowed to open and close the argument.

It is argued for defendant, appellant here, that, as the pleadings stood, plaintiff’s causes of action on the notes were admitted, leaving nothing in the case but the counterclaim, as to which the burden rested upon defendant; that defendant was therefore “entitled to the opening and closing in the matter of introducing evidence and the argument of the case to the jury.” And that the denial thereof was highly prejudicial to defendant and constituted reversible error.

But from what we have stated above we thinlc that it will be readily seen that the ruling complained of was not one denying defendant’s counsel the right to open and close the argument to the jury.. Indeed nothing appears in the record respecting the argument of counsel before the jury. The request or demand by defendant to be allowed “to open and close the ease,” made as it was at the beginning of the trial, after the reading of the pleadings and before the introduction of any evidence, could have had reference, it seems, only to the question of defendant’s right to proceed forthwith to put in his evidence on the counterclaims; as the court evidently treated it. In the view most favorable to defendant, this demand included the assertion of such right; and we regard it as clear that defendant has no cause to complain of the court’s ruling.

[635]*635It is true that since there was no verified plea of non est factum, the execution of the notes — importing-consideration — stood admitted (Sec. 1895, Rev. Stat. 1909); and no affirmative defense was interposed. In the ahseneé of the. counterclaims, plaintiff would have been entitled to judgment on the pleadings. And it may be, as argued by appellant’s learned counsel, that it was not necessary that the notes he introduced in evidence. But we think that it cannot be doubted that the court was not hound to require plaintiff to rest on the admission arising on the pleadings by virtue of the statute mentioned, though it he sufficient to support a judgment; that it was not error to permit her, if she chose, to put the notes in evidence, and thus establish by proof the causes of action pleaded, before defendant proceeded with his counterclaim. That it was unnecessary for plaintiff to identify the signature is immaterial here. Plaintiff did not undertake to testify concerning the counterclaims until cross-examined thereon by defendant. In any event, defendant cannot he said to have been prejudiced by the course pursued with respect to the introduction of evidence.

It may he conceded that, since the court’s instructions left nothing in the case for the consideration of the jury hut a counterclaim, as to which defendant had the burden, defendant’s counsel was entitled to open and close the argument to the jury. But having made no point of this particular matter below, defendant can not now he heard to complain thereof upon the theory that he was denied such right by the court’s ruling, at the outset of the trial, to the effect that he was not entitled “to open and close the case.”

Whether it would have been reversible error had the court refused a specific request of defendant to he allowed to open and close the argument, under the circumstances of the case, we need not decide.

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Bluebook (online)
198 S.W. 483, 197 Mo. App. 630, 1917 Mo. App. LEXIS 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdonald-v-redemeyer-moctapp-1917.