Scott v. Parkview Realty & Improvement Co.

145 S.W. 48, 241 Mo. 112, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 274
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 1, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 145 S.W. 48 (Scott v. Parkview Realty & Improvement Co.) 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
Scott v. Parkview Realty & Improvement Co., 145 S.W. 48, 241 Mo. 112, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 274 (Mo. 1912).

Opinion

VALLIANT, C. J.

— Plaintiffs sue to recover a balance claimed by them to be due from defendant for work done in grading a certain tract of land belonging to defendant lying partly in tke city and partly in the county of St. Louis.

Tke petition is in six counts; before entering on tke trial plaintiffs dismissed tkeir second and fourth counts, and went to trial on tke first, tkird, fiftk and sixtk. At tke close of the evidence on both sides tke court at tke request of defendant g'ave instructions to tke jury to tke effect that as to tke first and tkird counts tke plaintiffs were not entitled to recover, whereupon tke plaintiffs took a nonsuit with leave as to those two counts; tke trial progressed as to tke fiftk and sixtk counts, resulting in a verdict in each for tke plaintiffs; thereupon a judgment was rendered to tke effect as to tke first and tkird counts tke plaintiffs take nothing by tkeir writ, and that as to tke fifth and sixth counts they have and recover of defendant the amounts awarded tke plaintiffs by tke verdicts of tke jury. In due time plaintiffs filed their motion to set aside tke judgment of nonsuit, which motion tke court overruled and tke plaintiffs in due form applied for and obtained an appeal- to this court.

Tke plaintiffs’ complaint here is that tke court erred in giving tke instructions that forced them to a nonsuit on tke first and third counts; no appeal was taken by defendant and no complaint is made by the plaintiffs as to the judgment in so far as it disposes of tke fiftk and sixtk counts.

I. It is contended that this appeal should be dismissed, because, it is said, there is a final judg[121]*121ment as to the fifth and sixth counts, but none as to the first and third. The argument is that since under our statute, section 1973, Revised Statutes 1909, there can be but one final judgment in a case, although there may be several causes of action united in one petition, and the plaintiffs having allowed final judgment to be entered in their favor on the fifth and sixth counts without disposing of the first and third, their only course now is to allow this appeal to be dismissed and bring a new suit on the first and third counts. But that argument overlooks the fact that this judgment as the record shows disposes as well of the first and third counts as it does of the fifth and sixth, it is as final a judgment as to the first and third counts as it is to the fifth and sixth, it is as final a judgment as a circuit court can render and the whole case is disposed of in one final judgment. The judgment, after reciting facts leading to the nonsuit, continues: “And thereupon the plaintiffs by leave of court take a non-suit as to said first and third counts of said petition, with leave to move to set the same aside; and it is accordingly ordered and adjudged by the court that . plaintiffs take nothing by this their .suit as to said first and third counts of said petition.” Then the judgment goes on to recite the verdicts of the jury on the fifth and sixth counts and continues: “It is therefore considered and adjudged by the court that plaintiffs have and recover against said defendant the sum of nine hundred and twenty-two dollars, said sum being the aggregate of said sums of $872 and fifty dollars, damages assessed by the jury as aforesaid,” together with interest and costs, etc.

The motion to set aside the nonsuit stands in the same relation to that part, of the judgment as a motion for a new trial would stand to the part of the yAR’ ment that is based on the verdict of the jury; the me - tion does not annul the judgment; the appeal that follows is from the judgment, not from the order over[122]*122ruling Hie motion. In theory the judgment follows •the order overruling- the motion, though in practice it precedes it. A judgment of nonsuit may not end the litigation, because another suit may be brought on the same cause of action, but it ends that suit, and is as to that suit as much a final judgment as a judgment on the merits would be.

A party cannot appeal from a judgment that is wholly in his favor, one that gives him aril he asks, but he 'may appeal from a judgment that gives him only a part of what he sues for. If the plaintiffs should prevail in this appeal the judgment will be reversed, not only that part relating to the first and third counts, but that part relating to the fifth and sixth also, but the verdicts will stand, there being no appeal in relation to them, and the judgment on them will be reserved to be made a part of the final judgment in the case when all the issues are tried.

■ The judgment rendered by the circuit court in this case fully conforms to the requirement of the statute that there shall be but one final judgment; and if the trial court was correct in its conclusions it is the only judgment it could have rendered. Respondent insists that the appeal should be dismissed for the reason that appellant has failed to bring up parts of the testimony.

Respondent has availed itself of its privilege to file an additional abstract and has also 'filed a statement of facts. It is not made to appear from respondent’s motion to dismiss or its showing in support' thereof that the part of the testimony alleged to have been omitted by appellant is material to the question of law presented to this court for consideration.

The abstracts filed by both parties put this court in possession of sufficient facts to enable us to decide the only real question in the case, that is, whether the trial court was justified in forcing the plaintiffs to a nonsuit on their first and third counts. The motion to dismiss is ovérruled.

[123]*123II. The suit grows out of a grading contract. The first count is on the contract, the third is for the same demand but is in the form of an action quantum meruit for work and labor done. The answer besides a general denial pleads a settlement, accord and satisfaction; the reply is a plea of confession and avoidance, that the alleged settlement was obtained by-misrepresentation and duress and was without consideration. The case seems to turn chiefly on the issue of accord and satisfaction as alleged in the answer and avoided in the reply.

The contract called for excavating earth in the high places, hauling and depositing it in the low places, for which plaintiffs were to be paid eighteen cents per cubic yard when the average haul was 1400 feet, and, in addition thereto three-fourths of one cent per cubic yard for every 100 feet of average haul when it exceeded 1400 feet. The main controversy in the case is in reference to the plaintiffs’ claim for that overhaul. When the work was fully completed the engineer in charge made his final estimate showing excavating and grading of 2,053,585 cubic yards at eighteen cents, plus allowance of 260 feet as excess of overhaul, the whole amounting to $409,692.20, which after deducting amounts of previous payments left due plaintiffs $72,497.70. Plaintiffs in their bill rendered claimed that the true overhaul was 506 feet more than the 260 feet allowed by the engineer, which at the contract price showed the amount due the plaintiff to be $77,933.94 in excess of the $72,497.70 balance shown by the engineer’s final estimate.

III. There is no dispute of the fact that the engineer did not estimate the overhaul as' it actually was, but he estimated it on a plan of his own devising which he thought was just. The engineer, who was the defendant’s agent in charge of the work, and under whose direction the contract required the work [124]

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Bluebook (online)
145 S.W. 48, 241 Mo. 112, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-parkview-realty-improvement-co-mo-1912.