Slaughter v. Davenport

51 S.W. 471, 151 Mo. 26, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 294
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 15, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 51 S.W. 471 (Slaughter v. Davenport) 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
Slaughter v. Davenport, 51 S.W. 471, 151 Mo. 26, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 294 (Mo. 1899).

Opinion

BURGESS, J.

This case was begun before a justice of the peace in Jackson county in the name of T. W. Green, O. V. Slaughter and H. C. Brooking, plaintiffs, who recovered judgment for the sum of $58.43. Erom this judgment defendant appealed to the circuit court of said county, and when the case was called for trial at the October term, 1898, of said circuit court, and on the 31st day of said month, plaintiff amended his petition by leave of court striking out the names of T. W. Green and H. C. Brooking. Thereupon the trial of the cause was proceeded with before the court and jury, which resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $66.75. Within four days thereafter defendant filed his motion for a new trial, assigning as grounds therefor:

1. Because the court erred in allowing plaintiffs to amend the statement by dismissing and striking out all names of plaintiffs except Slaughter.

[29]*292. Because tbe action tried in tbis court is not tbe action sued on in tbe justice court, and tried there.

3. Because tbe contract testified to by plaintiff and on wbicb be recovered is not tbe contract pleaded in tbe statement.

4. Because tbe court erred in permitting plaintiff to introduce improper evidence against tbe objections of defendant.

■ 5. Because tbe court erred in giving improper instructions asked for by plaintiff, to wit, Nos. 1, 2, 3 and 4.

6. Because tire court erred in refusing to give proper instructions asked for by defendant, to wit, all of tbe defendant’s instructions wbicb tbe court refused.

1. Because tbe verdict is against tbe evidence.

8. Because tbe court erred in refusing to sustain defendant’s demurrer to tbe evidence.

9. Because tbe verdict and judgment are against tbe law.

10. Because there was a fatal variance between tbe contract given in evidence by plaintiff and tbe contract pleaded by him.

Tbe motion was sustained, and a new trial granted.

From tbe order and judgment of tbe court sustaining the motion and granting a new trial, plaintiff appealed to tbe Kansas City Court of Appeals, where tbe judgment of tbe circuit court granting tbe new trial was affirmed, but upon a motion for rehearing tbe cause was certified to tbe Supreme Court upon tbe ground that tbe opinion is in conflict with Davis v. Ritchie, 85 Mo. 501.

Tbe facts in addition to those stated are about as follows: Tbe statement filed with tbe justice alleges that tbe defendant by a written contract, promised to pay tbe plaintiffs tbe sum of $50, March 1, 1892; in trust, for tbe purpose of macadamizing what is known as tbe Raytown road in Jackson county, Missouri, from Leeds to Raytown. It does not allege whether tbe money was to be paid severally or jointly.

[30]*30On the trial in the circuit court the evidence for plaintiff tended to show that the contract was to pay Brooking, Slaughter or T. W. Green, and that the only condition therein was that the necessary funds subscribed should be equal to .one-fourth the cost of macadamizing the road. The evidence also showed that the amount subscribed was one-fourth of the cost as estimated by the county surveyor in accordance with the statute under which the macadamizing was done.

Plaintiff testified that he had signed defendant’s name to a subscription paper by his, defendant’s consent; and that the subscription was for building a road from near Leeds to Ray-town or beyond towards Lee’s Summit. That Davenport made it a condition of his subscription that his money was not to be used unless the road was macadamized beyond Raytown; that he declined to sign his name to the paper, but stood by in silence when Slaughter told him they must have something to show who subscribed to the fund, and that he would write Davenport’s name to the paper; that Davenport gave him (Slaughter) a check for the $50, but upon the express condition that it was not to be used unless the road went beyond Raytown; that Davenport never authorized him to sign his name to a subscription to build a ro'ad to Raytown only; that after the fund wias all made up, the county court, in the fall of 1892, let the contract to build the road to Raytown only, whereupon he (Slaughter) returned Davenport’s check.to him, with the understanding that if the road was afterward built beyond Raytown, Dayenport would pay the $50; that the subscribed fund was paid over to the county court in August or the first of September, 1892; the contract for the road was let September 29, 1892; that he never made demand on Davenport for this money until after the road was built beyond Ray-town, in the summer of 1893.

The defendant testified that he never authorized his name to be signed to any subscription paper, never knew that it was so signed; that he never agreed to pay anything for a road to [31]*31Raytown, but did agree to pay $50 for a road to be built beyond Raytown and gave his check for that amount to Slaughter to be used upon that condition only; that after the fund was made up and the contract let to Raytown, Slaughter stated to him that his condition could not be complied with and returned his check. Defendant put in evidence the contract for the road and the estimates, showing that the county court only estimated and contracted for a road to Raytown, and that the fund subscribed was more than consumed in building that road.

The first question with which we are confronted, is as to the nature of the obligation sued on, whether as to the obligees T. W. Green, H. O. Brooking and Orlando Slaughter, it is a joint or several contract. In determining this question we are not to be governed by the terms of the contract alone but by what is the real interest of the parties. “If the interest of the obligees is joint, it matters not that the contract in its terms is several; it is a joint contract in the enforcement of which all must join.” Y Am. and Eng. Ency. of Law (2 Ed.), 102.

The complaint alleges that defendant promised to pay plaintiffs the sum of fifty dollars in trust for the purpose of macadamizing a certain road, which the evidence shows was a public road, for the use and benefit of the public generally. The obligees are simply trustees in the contract which is joint, and there is nothing in it which authorizes them to prosecute separate suits thereon.

In Thieman v. Goodnight, 17 Mo. App. 429, there is quoted with approval the following from 1 Parsons on Contracts (Y Ed.), 13: “A contract with several persons, for the payment to them of a sum of money, is a joint contract with all, and all the payees therein have a joint interest, so that no one can sue alone for his proportion.” [Bliss on Code Pleading, sec. 63; Rainey v. Smizer, 28 Mo. 310.]

So in Capen v. Barrows, 1 Gray 3Y6, it is said: “When the legal interest in a covenant and in the cause of action [32]*32thereon is joint, the covenant is joint, although the covenant, in its terms, be several, or joint and several.”

The case of Hayden v. Snell, 9 Gray 365, was a suit upon an obligation by which the obligor promised to pay Charles Hayden or his wife Anna Hayden annually during their natural lives a specific sum, and it was held that the contract was in legal effect an agreement to pay the sum named in the contract to both the persons named as promisees, and, so long as they survived the promise being to pay either an action might be maintained in their names jointly.

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Bluebook (online)
51 S.W. 471, 151 Mo. 26, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slaughter-v-davenport-mo-1899.