Suddarth v. Empire Lime Co.

79 Mo. App. 585, 1899 Mo. App. LEXIS 329
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 4, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 79 Mo. App. 585 (Suddarth v. Empire Lime Co.) 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
Suddarth v. Empire Lime Co., 79 Mo. App. 585, 1899 Mo. App. LEXIS 329 (Mo. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

BLAND, P. J.

The petition is in three counts, the first of which is as follows:

“Plaintiff states that the defendant is a corporation duly organized under the laws of the state of Missouri, having its principal business office at Hannibal, in Marion county, Missouri, and that at all of the times mentioned in the several counts in this petition hereinafter set forth the defendant was such corporation and was engaged in the business of manufacturing and dealing in lime, having its works in the county of Lincoln, in the state of Missouri

[588]*588“Eor his first cause of action against said defendant plaintiff states that on the-day of January, A. D. 1895, the defendant was indebted to plaintiff in the. sum of four hundred and fifty-six ($456) dollars in this, that in the year 1894, and while the defendant was engaged in the manufacture of lime in the county of Lincoln aforesaid, the plaintiff and one P. J. Blair were engaged as partners, under the firm name and style of Suddarth & Blair, in dealing in cord wood in said county of Lincoln; that at said time said firm and the said defendant entered into an agreement or arrangement whereby said firm agreed to furnish the defendant a large amount of cord wood in said county of Lincoln for which the defendant agreed to pay said firm the sum of one dollar and seventy cents per cord for the amount of wood said firm should furnish; that in pursuance of said arrangement, said firm did furnish to defendant one hundred and eight and three-fourths cords of wood on the- day of October, 1894, and one hundred and fifty-nine and one-half cords of wood on the-day of November, 1894, all of which wood the defendant received at its works in Lincoln county, Missouri, and promised to pay for at the price per cord aforesaid, in all the sum of four hundred and fifty-six dollars; that on the first day of January, 1895, said firm demanded payment of said debt but defendant failed and refused to pay the same or any part thereof and the same still remains due and unpaid; that afterwards said firm duly assigned its said claim against defendant to plaintiff for value received and plaintiff is now the owner thereof and entitled to payment. Wherefore plaintiff prays judgment for said sum of four hundred and fifty-six dollars with interest thereon from January' 1st, 1895, and for costs of suit.”

The second count is for $160.80 worth of wood sold defendant in the year 1895, -with a demand of interest from August 20, 1895. The third one is for $7 for merchandise-sold and delivered by plaintiff to defendant. The answer [589]*589was a general denial of the first count, admitted the indebtedness of $160.80, on the second, but alleged that interest was due on it from August 19, 1897, and not from August 20, 1895, as claimed in the petition; and admitted the indebtedness of $7 claimed in the third count; averred a payment of the amounts admitted to be due to the clerk of the court for plaintiff’s benefit, and the giving of notice of the deposit to plaintiff. At the October term, 1897, of the Lincoln circuit court a trial was had to a jury, resulting in a verdict for plaintiff on the second and third counts, and a failure of the jury to agree on the first count. The verdict was accepted and entered of record and a formal judgment entered for plaintiff on the verdict for the amounts found to be due on 'the second and third counts of the petition. Within four days after the rendition of the verdict a motion for new trial was filed by the defendant. The motion was passed over until the succeeding April term, 1898, when on the third day of that term it was overruled by the court. On the same day the plaintiff moved the court to set aside the judgment entered at the preceding October term, on the grounds that it was irregularly and improperly rendered and was entered of record by the clerk against the express order of the court This motion was sustained and the judgment was set aside, but the verdict was permitted to stand. Defendant then moved the court to set aside the verdict and to re-submit the whole case to a jury for trial; this the court refused to do, whereupon the parties-went to trial on the first count of the petition, which resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff and judgment was rendered on all three of the counts in favor of the plaintiff. After an unavailing motion for new trial defendant duly appealed.

Appellant makes no specific assignment of error, but we gather from the brief and the oral argument of .counsel for appellant, that its contentions are, first, that the trial court lost jurisdiction of the cause by the entry of a final judgment [590]*590at the October term, 1897, and that all subsequent proceedings were coram non judiee; second, that it was error to divide the plaintiffs causes of action and submit the first count of the petition to a jury without also submitting the other two, notwithstanding the fact that a trial and verdict had theretofore been had on the second and third counts; and, third, that the court erred in giving instructions numbers 1, 3 and 4 for the plaintiff on the second trial of the first count. As to the first contention it is sufficient to say that the continuance of the motion for a new trial filed at the October term to the following April term, carried with it the judgment and the entire case, and the judgment was by reason of this continuance as much in the breast of the court at the April term as it was at the preceding October term. If the court had jurisdiction to hear the motion for new trial at the April term and to sustain it and set aside both the judgment and vei’dict, which the appellant asked it to do, it had jurisdiction to set aside the judgment because of irregularity independent of the motion for new trial. We are unable to see any merit in the second contention of appellant. The petition stated three separate and distinct causes of action, separately stated. The law required a separate and distinct finding on each of these causes of action, i. e., a separate verdict on each count. It was competent for the jury to find verdicts on all three counts because they were all submitted to them. For the reason that they were not able to agree on one of the counts, their verdicts as to the other two on which they did agree was not nugatory. After receiving this verdict and discharging the jury, leaving the issues on the first count undetermined, the court could not do’ otherwise than to set down the issues on the first count for retrial by another jury. The instructions complained of are as follows:

1. “If the jury believe from the evidence that the defendant by its course of dealing at its works at Elmore in [591]*5911894, led Suddarth & Blair to believe that John Lee had authority to act for defendant in the matter of buying the wood as claimed in the first count of the petition, then the defendant can not escape liability to plaintiff by reason of any arrangement between John Lee and defendant unless knowledge of such arrangements or of facts from which such arrangement might reasonably have been inferred, was brought to the attention of Suddarth & Blair or one of them before they sold the wood to Lee for defendant’s works.”

3.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 Mo. App. 585, 1899 Mo. App. LEXIS 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/suddarth-v-empire-lime-co-moctapp-1899.