Stalcup v. Bolt

139 S.W.2d 544, 234 Mo. App. 1070
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 4, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 139 S.W.2d 544 (Stalcup v. Bolt) 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
Stalcup v. Bolt, 139 S.W.2d 544, 234 Mo. App. 1070 (Mo. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

*1073 KEMP, J.

This is a suit on a note executed by defendant and payable to plaintiff, or order, dated October 26, 1936, and in the .principal amount of $900. The balance alleged to be due thereon was $690, for which sum, together with interest and attorneys’ fees, plaintiff prayed judgment.

Defendant filed the following answer:

"Now comes the above named defendant and for his answer to the above named petition of plaintiff admits an execution of the note sued on and described in said petition but denies plaintiff owns said note and any obligation to pay the said note for the following reasons:
"The said note was given for a new Neon sign to be installed on the Ben Bolt Coffee Shop, North Kansas City, Missouri and serviced for a period of five years from October 26, 1936. Defendant states that he has never received such sign contracted for although he has demanded that such sign be installed and that there is a total and complete failure of consideration for the said note.
"Defendant, further answering, states that plaintiff, instead of installing a new sign, installed an old and rebuilt sign which, defendant has just learned through Neon sign experts, was second-hand and rebuilt, which said sign defendant has tendered back to plaintiff and hereby tenders back to plaintiff.
"Wherefore defendant prays judgment against plaintiff on plaintiff’s petition.’'’

*1074 This is followed by two counterclaims set up in separate counts. In the first count, defendant alleged that on September 10, 1936, he contracted with the plaintiff to install a new Neon sign on the Ben Bolt Hotel in North Kansas City, Missouri, “the same to be a ‘Hotel Ben Bolt7 sign and to be of new materials throughout, for the sum of $200; that defendant paid the full purchase price for the said sign.77 It is further alleged that defendant had just learned through Neon sign experts that the sign installed was an old, rebuilt sign, whereas he had contracted for the purchase of a new sign, and further that the sign installed was not the property of the plaintiff, but was the property of one Tom Gavin of Kansas City, Missouri. Defendant alleged that he had tendered back to plaintiff the sign that was installed and had demanded the return of the purchase price so paid, but that plaintiff had refused to pay same, and judgment for $200 was accordingly prayed.

The second count of the counterclaim alleged that on October 26, 1936, defendant contracted with plaintiff for a new Neon sign to be installed in the Ben Bolt Hotel, which sign was to read ‘ ‘ Coffee Shop;7 7 that the sign was to be made of new materials throughout, and was to be in first class condition; that the defendant had paid on the contract price the sum of $210; that plaintiff installed a “Coffee Shop7 7 sign on said building, purporting to be a new sign built of first class materials, but that “he (defendant) has just learned through Neon sign experts that the said sign installed was an old, rebuilt sign of comparatively small value to the one contracted for; that he has tendered the same back to plaintiff and hereby tenders the same to plaintiff,77 which allegations were followed by a prayer for the $210 paid on the contract price.

Upon a trial of the issues thus raised, the jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the balance due on the principal sum and for interest and for ten per cent attorneys’ fees, in the aggregate sum of $851. On the first counterclaim concerning the “Ben Bolt Hotel” sign, the jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendant for $200. On defendant’s second counterclaim for the amount paid by defendant on the contract price of the “Coffee Shop” sign, the jury found in favor of the plaintiff, whereupon the court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $651, representing the excess of the verdict in favor of the plaintiff over the verdict in favor of defendant on his counterclaim. From this judgment defendant has prosecuted an appeal to this court in case No. 19578. Thereafter, plaintiff obtained our writ of error to have reviewed the part of the judgment relating to the counterclaim which was adverse to him. That case is No. 19598. These two matters have been consolidated and will be disposed of in a single opinion.

We shall consider first .the matters raised upon defendant’s appeal. Defendant first assigns as error the refusal of the court to give his *1075 instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence with respect to the plaintiff’s cause of action on the note. We cannot consider this assignment for the reason that the abstract of the record does not contain all of the evidence. Although the record discloses a stipulation between counsel for plaintiff and defendant, to the effect that the “foregoing bill of exceptions is true and correct and contains all the evidence offered and introduced, all the objections of counsel the rulings of the court thereon . . . .,” an examination of the record discloses beyond the slightest doubt that parts of the evidence have been omitted from the abstract. For instance, none of plaintiff’s testimony in chief appears in the abstract. The first line of plaintiff’s evidence, as set out in the abstract of the record, begins with the cross-examination of plaintiff. Following the third question of the cross-examination of plaintiff with reference to the ownership of the note, the court interposed the following suggestion: “I understood him (plaintiff) to say that he was the owner.”' The court, undoubtedly, was referring to some testimony of the plaintiff with respect to the ownership of the note which he had given prior to the three questions just asked by defendant’s counsel on cross-examination. There are other quite as convincing indications from the record that not all of the testimony pertaining to plaintiff’s cause of action has been brought before us in the record filed here. Even though the attorneys for the respective parties may have been of the opinion that the portion of the evidence abstracted was all that had any direct bearing upon the questions raised in this appeal, we cannot convict the trial court of error in ruling the demurrer without an opportunity to determine for ourselves, from all of the evidence, whether or not the ruling was correct. [Weintraub v. Life Insurance Co. (Mo. App.), 99 S. W. (2d) 160, l. c. 163; Breck v. Koeneman (Mo. App.), 108 S. W. (2d) 992, l. c. 994; Gillip v. Butts (Mo. App.), 77 S. W. (2d) 1014, l. c. 1016; Bertke v. Hoffman (Mo.), 50 S. W. (2d) 107, l. c. 108; Thomas v. Land (Mo. App.), 30 S. W. (2d) 1035, l. c. 1038, and cases there cited.]

Defendant’s only other assignment of error is directed to the giving of plaintiff’s instruction 1, which instruction purports to cover the entire case and direct a verdict. No complaint is made that the instruction fails to include all of the essential elements of plaintiff’s case. Defendant urges, however, that the instruction is erroneous in that it fails to submit to the jury “the special defense of defendant, supported by evidence, that plaintiff did not furnish defendant a new sign which was the consideration for the giving of the note sued on by plaintiff. ’ ’

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Bluebook (online)
139 S.W.2d 544, 234 Mo. App. 1070, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stalcup-v-bolt-moctapp-1940.