Moore v. Dawson

277 S.W. 58, 220 Mo. App. 791, 1925 Mo. App. LEXIS 138
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 9, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 277 S.W. 58 (Moore v. Dawson) 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
Moore v. Dawson, 277 S.W. 58, 220 Mo. App. 791, 1925 Mo. App. LEXIS 138 (Mo. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

*793 BLAND, J.

— Plaintiff recovered a verdict and judgment against the defendant in the sum of $661.76 and defendant has appealed.

The petition alleges that on December 4, 1917, plaintiff lent to the defendant the sum of $500, “which sum defendant agreed to repay to plaintiff'within three weeks after said date,” with interest; that although demanded of defendant, the money remained unpaid. The answer consists of a general denial.

Plaintiff testified that defendant approached him in the city of Oregon, where the parties resided, attempting to interest plaintiff in an Oklahoma oil lease to be purchased and resold at a profit. Defendant asked plaintiff if he had $500 and stated that “if you can get the money why I will either give you an interest in this lease or give you the money back within one or two weeks. For the use of the money I will give you an interest in this lease. I said, ‘Well, Jack, I will get the $500 but I want it back in one or two weeks and you can give me an interest in this lease.’ ” Defendant stated that the lease would be sold “in one or two weeks and then he would pay it back.” The money was paid to the defendant by plaintiff and in a week or two plaintiff demanded the return of it but defendant said that it was not to be returned for three weeks. After the expiration of three weeks, plaintiff again demanded the money but defendant put him off, stating that he was going to Kansas City to see some other parties who were interested in the lease from whom he would obtain the money. At one time defendant said “Well you figure up the interest and I will pay you the interest on it.”

On cross-examination plaintiff testified that defendant told him that he was going to resell the lease for double the purchase price “and I was to get — when sixty per cent was sold I was to get my money back.”

“Q. What about sixty ppr cent? A. When he sold sixty per cent of this lease ... he said he would sell it in one or two weeks.

“Q. And he would pay your money back when he sold sixty per cent of the lease? A. Tes.

“Q. And you let him have it on those conditions? A. Yes.

‘ ‘ Q. That when he sold sixty per cent of the lease, he was to pay you your money back? A.. Yes.

‘ ‘ Q. And he told you he thought he could do that in a couple of weeks? A. Yes. He promised me my money in two weeks.

“Q. That is the contract under which you let him have the money? A. He said, ‘I will return it to you within two weeks.’

Defendant’s version of the conversation was that he told' plaintiff that those pooling their interests in the lease, of which plaintiff was to be one, “were to receive an interest in the lease and when sixty per cent or sufficient amount of this lease had been sold, they were to have their money refunded to them.” “You may get this *794 back in three weeks and it may be three months and you may never get it back.” That he told plaintiff — ■

“. . . when the lease was sold he would get his money back, and he would get his interest in the acreage.”

Defendant further testified “that is the only agreement there ever was about it, and I never borrowed a cent from him in my life.” On cross-examination defendant testified that he took plaintiff’s cheek for $500 and turned it over to the trustee for the syndicate; that he told plaintiff that he would have a certain interest in the lease for the use of the money; that no part of the lease was ever sold for the reason that a well on other property close by came in dry and no one wanted the lease, that “it was a dead proposition.”

Defendant makes the point that the court erred in refusing to give his demurrer to the evidence; that plaintiff pleaded one cause of action and recovered on a different one, claiming that plaintiff’s testimony was “that the money was furnished to defendant to be invested in an oil lease in which plaintiff was to have an interest; that the lease was to be resold, and plaintiff’s money refunded when sixty per cent of the lease was sold.”

In discussing the demurrer to the evidence, the facts and all reasonable inferences that may be drawn therefrom must be taken in favor of plaintiff. There. is no doubt but that plaintiff on direct examination testified to the fact that he turned over the money to defendant on condition that it be returned in two weeks and for the use of the money for that period he was to have an interest in the lease. Defendant lays stress on plaintiff’s cross-examination but that testimony is susceptible of the construction that the contract was to the effect that the advancement was to be a loan, that the defendant agreed to sell sixty per cent of the lease within two weeks and return the money to plaintiff within that time. If this construction can be put upon plaintiff’s testimony, tTien it did not show that the money was to be returned conditionally, that is, when and if sixty per cent of the lease was sold. Even if it can be said that there is a contradiction between plaintiff’s testimony on direct examination and on cross-examination, the jury were entitled to believe his testimony on direct examination and reject the other. [Bond v. Railroad, 110 Mo. App. 131; Cravens v. Hunter, 87 Mo. App. 456; Bobbitt v. Railroad, 169 Mo. App. 424.] There is nothing in this point. This, likewise, disposes of the objection to plaintiff’s instruction No. 1.

Objection is made to plaintiff’s instruction No. 2, which told the jury that if plaintiff lent defendant $500, which was to be repaid when sixty per cent of the oil lease in which defendant was to invest the $500 was sold, and defendant agreed that he would sell the sixty per cent of the lease within three weeks, then the money became *795 due and payable at the expiration of three weeks notwithstanding defendant had not sold sixty per cent of said lease within such time.

It is insisted that the petition alleges a loan and that plaintiff’s instruction No. 2 submits an entirely different issue to the jury. But it is not pointed out in what respect it submitted a different issue, and we are unable to find any other issue placed before the jury. The instruction undoubtedly submitted the question whether or not there was a loan, that is, whether defendant agreed to sell sixty per cent of the lease within three weeks and to repay the loan within that time.

The court on his own motion gave the jury the following instruction—

“The court instructs the jury that unless plaintiff has established by a preponderance of the evidence that the money paid by him to defendant was a loan, your verdict must be for the defendant, and you are instructed that if the money was paid to defendant by plaintiff for the purpose of an investment for the benefit of plaintiff, and mas not tobe repaid to plaintiff, the transaction was not a loan..”

Defendant requested the instruction in this form but without the words in it that we have put in italics, but the court inserted the italicized words and then gave the instruction. It is insisted that the court erred in not giving the instruction as asked. ¥e think the action of the court was erroneous. Defendant had the right to have the instruction given as requested.

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Bluebook (online)
277 S.W. 58, 220 Mo. App. 791, 1925 Mo. App. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-dawson-moctapp-1925.