Wagner v. Edison Electric Illuminating Co.

121 S.W. 329, 141 Mo. App. 51, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 267
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 20, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 121 S.W. 329 (Wagner v. Edison Electric Illuminating 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
Wagner v. Edison Electric Illuminating Co., 121 S.W. 329, 141 Mo. App. 51, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 267 (Mo. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

NOETONI, J.

(after stating the facts. — Among others, the court gave the following instruction on behalf of the defendant:

“The court instructs the jury that although they believe from the evidence that plaintiff may have intended at the time he was selected as supervising engineer to charge defendant for such services as he might render it, yet if the jury further believe from the evidence that he did not disclose said intention to this defendant at the time or before his selection by the committee as engineer, and the defendant did not then know or have reason to believe from the committee’s employment of him as engineer that it was expected to pay him and did not intend to pay him for such services and that defendant notified plaintiff that it did not intend to pay [67]*67him for said services as soon as it learned that plaintiff intended to charge therefor, plaintiff .is not entitled to recover.”

The jury having found the issues for defandant, plaintiff prosecutes the appeal, and assigns the giving of this instruction as the only error complained of.

The evidence shows that plaintiff was appointed as engineer by the committee on joint conduit construction. That this appointment originally made by the committee was subsequently ratified or confirmed by the defendant company is obvious from the letters here-inbefore set out and other uncontroverted facts in proof. However this may be, throughout the case the defendant has insisted that the plaintiff did not intend to charge it for his services; that although plaintiff’s services were to be compensated by the two companies he represented, they were gratis to this defendant. Defendant’s theory of the case is that as plaintiff was in the employ of two other companies and represented them on the committee for joint conduit construction, he merely performed such services as were incident to that employment by the two companies which he represented, and that therefore he is not entitled to recover from the present defendant any more than Hr. Matlack, the' representative of this defendant on the joint committee, would be entitled to recover from the other companies for his services rendered in that behalf. The instruction referred to submitted to the jury that although they found from the evidence plaintiff may have intended to charge for his services at the time of his selection by the committee, yet if it also found that plaintiff had not disclosed his intention to charge to this defendant, and the defendant did not know, or have reason to believe, from the committee’s employment of him that it was expected/ to pay, and further found that defendant in fact did not intend to pay for his services, and that it notified plaintiff of such inten[68]*68tion on its part, as soon as it discovered be intended to charge, then plaintiff should not recover.

The first criticism leveled by the plaintiff against this instruction is that it authorized the jury to find the issues for defendant if it did not know, or have reason to believe, from the committee’s employment of plaintiff as engineer, that it was expected to pay for such services. It is argued, although defendant may not have known from the committee’s employment of the plaintiff an engineer that it was expected to pay him for his services, nevertheless plaintiff is prima facie entitled to a verdict on that score, if, by looking to all of the facts and circumstances of. the case and the amount and character of the services rendered, the defendant, as a reasonable person, should have known that it was expected to pay therefor. That is, by looking at the character of the services rendered by the plaintiff, defendant might have known that such services were not those incident to plaintiff’s office as a member of the committee alone, and were of such a character that a reasonable person who receives the benefit thereof, would expect to be called upon to compensate. There can be no doubt the instruction pointing the jury to what the defendant knew, or had reason to believe alone from the committee’s employment of plaintiff as engineer, was inaccurate, for the reason the defendant’s conduct in respect of this matter, should be determined rather by reference to the character of the services rendered than to the mere fact of appointment by the committee to perform the services. This for the reason that in respect of such matters, the law presumes certain services are to be furnished gratis; that is, as an officer of the joint committee on conduit construction, plaintiff owed to defendant as well as to all the other companies who were parties to the arrangement, certain services free of charge, for they were all acting together. In respect of these matters, each company furnished a man on the joint committee. The [69]*69services of the several members of the joint committee were furnished to all of the companies in consideration of the services of every other member of the committee. Therefore this defendant had the right to expect the services of plaintiff on the joint committee to be performed gratis to it as a recompense for the services of its agent, Mr. Matlack, on the same committee. However, this may not be true in respect of those more arduous services performed by plaintiff, which were different and distinct from those of a member of the joint committee. If the character and amount of those services were such as to lead a reasonable person to believe they were not being performed gratis and that compensation would he expected therefor, then the law will imply a promise to pay the reasonable value of the service rendered. The question should be determined by reference to the character and amount of the service rather than from the mere employment of plaintiff by the committee and in this respect, the instruction-was inaccurate.

It is said the instruction is erroneous for the further reason that it required the jury to find, among other things, either that the defendant intended to pay plaintiff or that the services rendered by him were of such a character that defendant should have had reason to believe that it was expected to pay for them. The argument advanced is that if the plaintiff performed valuable services for the defendant and intended at the time to charge therefor, defendánt having voluntarily accepted the same, the law implies a promise on the part of the defendant to pay the reasonable value thereof; and this, too, notwithstanding the matter of its intention in that behalf. Now, Sir William Blacks tone, in speaking of this matter generally, says the law implies a promise in such circumstances to pay and raises a presumption which proceeds from reason and justice to that end. “And if I employ a person to do any business for me, or perform any work; the law [70]*70implies that I undertook, or contracted to pay him as much as his labor deserved. If I take up wares from a tradesman without any agreement on prices, the law concludes that I contracted to pay their real value.” [2 Blackstone’s Comm., 443.] The rule just quoted from Blackstone is that which obtains between strangers. That is, where no relation exists affording a presumption to the contrary. Of course there can be no actual contract in any case except there be present the intention of both parties. That is to say, there must be a mutual meeting of the minds, in order to constitute an actual contract. Therefore, on principle, a contract which the law implies is one which the parties have not made; for if they have made an actual contract, by each intending and agreeing upon the same proposition, there is no room for implication by the law. [Weinsberg v. St.

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Bluebook (online)
121 S.W. 329, 141 Mo. App. 51, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wagner-v-edison-electric-illuminating-co-moctapp-1909.