Citation Numbers: 174 Mo. App. 705, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 162, 161 S.W. 359
Judges: Ellison
Filed Date: 12/1/1913
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
This is an action on an account for services alleged to have been rendered to defendant at his request. ' The judgment in the trial court was for plaintiff.
In view of our obligation to stand by the verdict of a jury when it is supported by any substantial evidence, we do not discover any good reason upon which to base this appeal. Defendant makes a statement in detail of the connection which he had with the St. Joseph Stockyards and of the doings of the Blair Horse and Mule Company and the Ben Miller Mule Company, showing the latter quit business in debt to the former, etc.; and that plaintiff had been its employee up to the time it ceased business.
Plaintiff’s statement sets out that defendant was a large stockholder in the Stockyards Bank in St. Joseph which “financed” the above companies.
Of these, the' first starts out with the erroneous statement that although defendant told plaintiff to take charge 'of of look after what was known as the Ben Miller mules that statement of itself will not constitute a contract on the part of defendant individually. ’ ’ To .have po characterized such acts, as a matter of law, would have been improper. It should have stated that such acts would; constitute a contract if accepted by plaintiff, unless plaintiff knew he was acting for other parties. The instruction was likewise improper in the •latter part in commenting or particularizing certain Evidence.
# Besides this all that defendant was entitled to on ¿the subject of whether he was acting for himself or Lor others was embodied in the instruction which the scourt modified. It is true that complaint is made of that modification, but it is apparent to us that it was .proper enough and could not have misled the jury. •Furthermore, since these instructions are bottomed on the concession that defendant did employ plaintiff, the •hypothesis that he must have made the employment for himself was improper, unaccompanied by the qualification that plaintiff knew defendant was not acting for himself. This fault would have justified the court in refusing entirely both instructions. The judgment was manifestly for the right party and is affirmed.