Smith v. Crews

2 Mo. App. 269, 1876 Mo. App. LEXIS 174
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 16, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2 Mo. App. 269 (Smith v. Crews) 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
Smith v. Crews, 2 Mo. App. 269, 1876 Mo. App. LEXIS 174 (Mo. Ct. App. 1876).

Opinion

Bakewell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action on a written contract. In the first count of his petition plaintiff claims a balance of $359 for wages due him, under the contract, as master of the steamboat “Evening Star.” In the second count plaintiff claims $4,155 for moneys advanced by him, according to the terms of the contract, for the benefit of defendants, for supplies, materials, and labor furnished to the boat, according to an itemized account filed with the petition.

Defendant Crews (the only defendant who appeals) files a separate answer, in which he denies all indebtedness; charges that plaintiff received and retained $45,000 of money belonging to defendants, as owners of the boat; that he refuses to account, and withholds papers and vouchers of the boat, and has now in his hands large sums, amounting altogether to $50,000, belonging to the defendants ; and prays for an account.

The replication denies the new matter in the answer, and states that the receipts of the boat, whilst in plaintiff’s charge, exceeded her earnings.

The case was referred, by consent, to a referée, who reports that neither plaintiff nor defendant are entitled to recover anything on balance of the boat’s accounts, and that plaintiff is entitled to recover $359, the balance claimed by him for his services as captain of the “Evening Star.”

Exceptions were filed to the report of the referee, which were overruled, and, a motion for a new trial having been filed and overruled, the cause is brought to this court by appeal.

The grounds of exception to the report are :

1..“That the referee erred in overruling the motion of defendants to require plaintiff to render an account of the boat.”

[271]*2712. “ That the referee erred in allowing plaintiff the wages claimed, as they were provided for in the written contract, and could-not be separated from it.”

Under this head the exceptor sets up that the grossly unfair dealing of plaintiff, in the matter of his accounts with -defendants, as shown in the evidence, is a sufficient ground for disallowing his claim for wages.

1. The referee reports that he finds it impossible to determine, from the mass of contradictory testimony before him, which party is here bound to account to the other. 'There was some evidence that plaintiff was for a time driven from the boat, and the books taken from his possession. From the vouchers, letters, books, and testimony of experts before him, the referee states that he finds it impossible to state an account between the parties.

We cannot, under the circumstances, say that the referee committed an error in law in not requiring the plaintiff to render an account of the affairs of the boat, since an account, for whatever reason, had become, he says, impossible.

2. Whether, under the written agreement between plaintiff and defendants, the accounting for and paying over to the defendants, by plaintiff, the moneys received by him for them was a condition precedent to his recovery in this case, is a question that we cannot determine with absolute satisfaction to ourselves, owing to the state of the record. Though this is a suit on a written contract, and the contract itself is material to the determination of this question, error has been assigned on one side, and a joinder filed on the other, without any examination, apparently, of the record itself; for the page on which the contract between the parties should appear is left entirely blank, except for the title of the paper. However, as no words in a contract necessarily make a condition precedent, and as the intention of the parties, to be gathered from the whole instrument, is probably correctly set out in the pleadings, and in the statement of the contract made by the referee in his special findings, this [272]*272is not, perhaps, after all, a matter of very great importance. It sufficiently appears that plaintiff was hired as master of the boat, at a certain monthly salary ; that he was to pay a certain indebtedness of the boat, for which he was to be reimbursed, with 10 per cent, interest; that he was to manage the financial'affairs of the boat, and account to defendants, her owners. This seems to have been the substance of the agreement between the parties, and proof of his performance of his duty in this respect cannot be held, under such an agreement, an indispensable prerequisite to the recovery of his salary, or of any part of it. The breach of' the stipulation to account gives a right of action to the injured party ; but the conditions were distinctly separable, so that much of what was agreed to be done could be performed on both sides as if the condition was not there ; and this is laid down as the test of independent covenants. When the covenants are mutual, but independent, one party may maintain an action on the covenant to be performed by the other, without averring performance of the contract on his’ own part. The law has no preference for one kind of a contract over another, and will not make an independent, covenant by implication or intendment. 6 Gray, 121; Willes, 157. We see nothing, then, in the contract, as presented to us by this record, which enables us to declare, as a matter of law, that the accounting required in the agree’ment was in such a sense a condition precedent to recovery by plaintiff,’ that, until the referee had found as an affirmative fact that plaintiff had accounted according to the contract, he could not allow to plaintiff any amount that might appear to be due as wages under the agreement.

3. Nevertheless, cases constantly occur of such gross-neglect and misconduct by agents, in the matter of keeping-accounts and vouchers, and managing financial affairs intrusted to them, as to amount to a complete forfeiture of all compensation. The report of the referee in this case shows that he finds from the evidence a state of facts to have [273]*273existed such as to make it clear to us, as a matter of law, that the plaintiff was entitled to no. compensation for his services. We quote from the referee’s report:

‘ ‘ The testimony introduced by defendant tends to show that the books, as originally kept, would not show the true condition of the boat’s accounts. Majors, one of the clerks, in his deposition, says plaintiff depended on him to keep-his accounts of cash, and this could not be done, owing to-the manner in which plaintiff kept his business. He says it was impossible to tell whether the bills and expenses of the boat were correct or not. Witness made his entries partly from his own knowledge, partly from what plaintiff told him. He says the books did not show the entire transactions of the boat. ‘I can’t tell,’ he testifies, ‘by the books, whether the owners of the:boat owe Smith $3,000, or whether Smith owes the owners of the boat $3,000, as there were other transactions between them that were never put down, that the books don’t show.’

“ In point of fact it appears, from Smith’s own testimony —and much stress is laid by him upon the fact — that the moneys paid out by him. from his own private funds, and which he claims in this suit, were not entered upon the books of the boat at all. He makes frequent reference to a private memorandum-book — a black book which he says was left on the boat at Sioux City — which showed his private disbursements for the boat. It was kept by Majors and McFarland, in the clerk’s office of the steamer. McFarland had charge of it. The entries in it, he testifies, were made up from vouchers.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Mo. App. 269, 1876 Mo. App. LEXIS 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-crews-moctapp-1876.