Reed v. Peck, Guitar & Watson

63 S.W. 734, 163 Mo. 333, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 365
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 11, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 63 S.W. 734 (Reed v. Peck, Guitar & Watson) 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
Reed v. Peck, Guitar & Watson, 63 S.W. 734, 163 Mo. 333, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 365 (Mo. 1901).

Opinion

BURGESS, J.

— This action was instituted by George R. Jacobs against the city of Columbia, and others, including the appellants, Peek, Guitar and Watson, to recover damages for the grading and graveling of Hitt street in said city along by Jacobs’s property. The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment against the' appellants in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $225, and in favor of the other defendants.

The defendants against whom the judgment was rendered then appealed the case to the Kansas City Court of Appeals, where the judgment was affirmed.

Thereafter, the cause was transferred by that court to the Supreme Court on account of one of the judges of that court deeming the decision in conflict with the case of Basye v. Kansas City, Pittsburg & Gulf Railway Company, 65 Mo. App. 468. Since the case has been pending in this court the original plaintiff, Jacobs, has died, and the cause has been regularly revived in the name of his administrator, James H. Reed.

Although defendant Guitar was mayor, and defendants Peck and Watson members of the committee on streets of the city of Columbia at the time of the commission of the grievances complained of, they are not sued in their official capacity, but they and all the defendants are sued as joint tortfeasors, and they now make the point that there was no evidence to warrant the verdict and judgment against them. Notwithstanding this point is made, appellants virtually concede that all of the evidence is not embraced in the abstract, the evidence of several of the witnesses being left out entirely, while as to others only a brief synopsis or summary of what is called by defendants the substance of such testimony. As was said in the case of Epstein v. Clothing Company, 67 Mo. App. 221: “It will not do to allow appellants’s counsel to cull over the record and present such evidence as they may think pertinent or [337]*337material; the entire evidence must be set out, so that this court may, for itself, determine its materiality and probative force.” So in Davis v. Vories, 141 Mo. 234, it was held that the Supreme Court will not pass upon the insufficiency of the evidence where it is not fully set out in the record. The same rule is announced in Ogelbay v. Kansas City College of Dental Surgery, 71 Mo. App. 339.

But, as was said by the Court of Appeals: “Even on the face of the testimony, as shown by this imperfect abstract, we are not prepared to declare that there was no evidence to justify the verdict. The grading of this street in front of plaintiff’s residence was unquestionably done without lawful authority, was a trespass; there was no ordinance providing for such grading. And while the work was actively performed by the street commissioner, there was, it seems, evidence tending to prove that Mayor Guitar and street committeemen Peck and Watson were present from time to time superintending and encouraging the work. In McMannus v. Lee, 43 Mo. 206, Judge Wagner, speaking for the court, says: “That any person who is present at the commission of a trespass, encouraging or exciting the same by words, gestures, etc.,.... or who in any way or by any means countenances or approves the same, is in law deemed to be an aider and abettor, and liable as a principal; and proof that a person is present at the commission of a trespass, without disapproving or opposing it, is evidence from which, in connection with other circumstances, it is competent for the jury to infer that he assented thereto, lent to it his countenance and approval, and was thereby aiding and abetting the same.”

See also Leeser v. Boekhoff, 33 Mo. App. 223, and cases cited.

Mrs. Eives and Miss Irene Eives, witnesses for plaintiff, [338]*338were permitted to testify over the objection of defendants that Coffee, the street commissioner, told them that he was getting his orders about the work from the city council, and in this ruling it is insisted that error was committed. It is argued that this testimony was pure hearsay, and prejudicial, since the jury may have gotten therefrom the idea that the members had personally been giving orders about the matter. While we are of the opinion that the facts disclosed by the evidence do not justify the conclusion that there was an understanding or agreement between the street commissioner and the appellants, by which the grievances complained of were to be committed, and therefore the testimony mere hearsay and inadmissible, we are unable to see in what way it was prejudicial to defendants, for it is clear that the street commissioner did perform the work in pursuance of a resolution passed by the city council. But as the council had no authority to authorize the grading in front of plaintiff’s residence otherwise than by ordinance, the resolution passed directing it was without authority, void, and afforded no protection to those who did the grading.

Another assignment of error is the action of the trial court in permitting plaintiff’s wife, Mrs. Jacobs, to testify over the objection of defendants that she was her husband’s agent as to the management of the property alleged to have been damaged, thus qualifying herself to testify as a witness in behalf of her husband with respect thereto. The position is that such agency can only be proven by other evidence, and that the wife was not a competent witness to prove such an agency.

At common law, as a general.rule, a wife was not competent to testify as a witness in behalf of her husband in a civil action where he was a party, but by section 8922, Revised Statutes 1889, the common law rule was changed, and by that section she is made competent to testify for and in behalf of her husband, “in all matters of business transactions when [339]*339the transaction was had and conducted by such married woman as the agent of her husband; and no married man shall be disqualified as a witness in any such civil suit or proceeding prosecuted in the name of or against his wife,' whether he be joined with her or not as a party, when such suit or proceeding is based upon, grows out of, or is connected with any matter of business or business transaction where the transaction or business was had with or was conducted by such married man as the agent of his wife. Provided, that nothing in this section shall be construed to authorize or permit any married woman, while the relation exists, or subsequently, to testify to any admission or conversation of her husband, whether made to herself or to third parties.”

In the case of Williams v. Williams, 67 Mo. 661, the wife was not a party to the suit and was permitted to testify upon the trial of the cause to prove her own agency for her husband, and it was ruled that in order to make the testimony of a married woman admissible in a suit to which her husband is a party, on the ground that she acted as his agent- in the transaction to which it relates, the fact of her agency must be shown by some competent witness, and she is not a competent witness for that purpose.

In the case of Wheeler & Wilson Manufacturing Company v. Tinsley, 75 Mo. 458, the wife was not a party to the record and was permitted to testify to her own agency, which was held to be erroneous, and that such agency must be shown by some witness other than herself.

Basye v. Railroad Company, 65 Mo. App.

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Bluebook (online)
63 S.W. 734, 163 Mo. 333, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reed-v-peck-guitar-watson-mo-1901.