Oliver v. Love

78 S.W. 335, 104 Mo. App. 73, 1904 Mo. App. LEXIS 448
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 19, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 78 S.W. 335 (Oliver v. Love) 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
Oliver v. Love, 78 S.W. 335, 104 Mo. App. 73, 1904 Mo. App. LEXIS 448 (Mo. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

Both the parties to this action appealed and their appeals have been consolidated.

Plaintiff sued the defendants on a promissory note • dated November 10, 1897, bearing interest from date at the rate of eight per cent, compounded if not paid .annually. The execution of the note was admitted by the defendants, as were certain payments on it which were enumerated in the petition. Their answer, after making these admissions, averred that the note had been paid and discharged prior to the institution of this action.

A counterclaim was declared on by the defendants, consisting of various items amounting to $213.35. It was made up of a running account based on sales of grain to the plaintiff, pasturage for cattle, differences due the defendants on cattle trades, and other transactions which need not be stated. A replication was filed in which it was averred that the account between the parties was converted into an account stated for $530, by a settlement between the parties prior to the execution of the note in suit; that at the time the account was stated and the note executed, it was agreed the note should be in full settlement of all past transactions and dealings between the parties. The replication says further, that five of the items in the counterclaim, amounting to $108, were included in the settlement. Certain other items of the counterclaim are then enumerated in the replication, whose total plaintiff concedes the defendants were entitled to be credited with on the note and avers that the balance due thereon is $183.07.

It thus appears that as to part of the items in the [78]*78counterclaim there was no controversy and this disposes of one of the plaintiff’s assignments of error, to-wit; the circuit court’s refusal of an instruction ashed by the plaintiff that the burden was on the defendants to prove each and every item of their counterclaim and that if they failed to prove any of them by the greater weight of the evidence, the verdict should be for the plaintiff for all of those not thus proved. This charge was wrong; for while it was incumbent on the defendants to establish by a preponderance of the evidence, the validity of the disputed items, it was not incumbent on them to prove the undisputed ones.

One item of the counterclaim was for $17.60, for three hogs, alleged to have been sold to plaintiff by defendants May 10, 1896. Two instructions were asked by plaintiff 'as to this transaction, to the effect that the finding on it must be for the plaintiff. Those instructions were refused, the plaintiff says, erroneously. His argument is that the undisputed evidence shows the three hogs were sold by the defendants to Tim Lambertson and by Lambertson to Oliver, instead of being sold by the defendants to Oliver; that, therefore, Oliver did not owe the defendants for the hogs.

The evidence is that just as Lambertson had purchased from the defendants a bunch of hogs, including the three in dispute, Oliver came up and said he would like to have those three, and Lambertson agreed he might have them. They were separated from the others and Oliver drove them off. The testimony is certainly susceptible of'the inference that, instead of Lambertson selling the hogs to Oliver, he waived his right to them and allowed the defendants to sell them to Oliver, which they did, Oliver acquiring them by a purchase from the defendants and becoming thereby indebted to the defendants. We, therefore, overrule the assignment of error based on the refusal of the instructions directing the jury to find for the plaintiff on this item of the counterclaim.

[79]*79It is asserted the court erred in refusing to charge the jury that there was a presumption of law that the defendants owed Oliver $500 at the time they executed the note in suit and, consequently, unless the defendant had shown, by the weight of the evidence, that some of the items of the counterclaim were not embraced in said settlement, the verdict should be for the plaintiff on the counterclaim. The court instructed the jury to disallow such items of the counterclaim as they might find from the evidence were included in the settlement, and this was a sound instruction. It was not proper to instruct that there was a legal presumption as to how much the defendants owed the plaintiff at the date of the settlement,when there was evidence from which they were to find what was then owing and what transactions were included in it. Haycraft v. Grigsby, 88 Mo. App. loe. eit. 362.

The only point in this appeal of doubt, or deserving any comment, arises on the contention that the defendant J. D. Love was entitled to interest from the date of the verdict to the rendition of final judgment, on the amount found by the jury in his favor on the counterclaim. To make this point intelligible, the course the case took in the circuit court must be stated: At the first trial the jury found a verdict for the plaintiff on the note in tlie sum of $190.98 and in favor of the defendant J. D. Love, on the counterclaim for $185.35, assessing plaintiff’s damages at the difference between the two amounts, to-wit: $5.63. Judgment was entered in accordance with this verdict. That verdict was returned June 4, 1902. On the same day plaintiff filed motions for new trial and in arrest. On June 4, 1902, defendants filed a motion asking the court to amend the verdict and correct the judgment, stating, in support of the motion, that the verdict on the note was for more than the petition asked, and that the amount actually due on it was $184.24, instead of $190.98, as found by the jury; that it was the plain intention of the jury to [80]*80render a verdict for the difference between the amount actually due and the amount of the counterclaim, and the court was prayed to find the difference and enter judgment for it. On June 28,1902, the court overruled said motion; but having found the verdict to be inaccurate, and that the true amount due on the note could be found by computation, it entered an order that unless the plaintiff would remit the excess of the verdict in his favor, it would set it aside. Plaintiff refused to enter a remittitur and the finding on the note was set aside but not the finding on the counterclaim, which was left standing. At the same term, plaintiff’s motions for new trial and in arrest were overruled and he appealed. It seems the defendants filed another motion, admitting the amount due on the note was the balance that would remain after deducting the credits indorsed on it, and praying that it be computed and judgment entered in accordance with the finding and verdict of the jury. This motion the court- refused to pass on and defendants excepted. Plaintiff dismissed his aforesaid appeal on June 28,1902, and on December 8, 1902, the mandate of this court showing the dismissal, was filed in the circuit court. On December 27,1902, the circuit court continued the case on its own motion to the next term. At the next term, to-wit; in June, 1903, the defendants’ last motion for judgment was overruled and they excepted. On June 5, 1903, the case was continued on plaintiff’s application, until June 30, at which date plaintiff’s cause of action was -tried before the court, resulting in a finding in his favor for $188.41, which was $3.06 in excess of the amount found by the jury in favor of J. D. Love on the counterclaim; so judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiff for the said sum of $3.06. The circuit court refused to allow said defendants interest from the date of the verdict, June 4, 1902, to June 30, 1903, when final judgment was rendered on the amount found by the verdict to be due him.

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Bluebook (online)
78 S.W. 335, 104 Mo. App. 73, 1904 Mo. App. LEXIS 448, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oliver-v-love-moctapp-1904.