Court Opinion

ID: 6615034
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:21:24.304627+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:58:29.859265
License: Public Domain

Ellison, J.
This action is for work and labor performed by plaintiff for defendants, who were contractors for the construction of a branch of the Jefferson City, Lebanon & South Western Railway.
On trial before a jury, a verdict was given for plaintiff, and defendants appeal.
The written proposition of plaintiff to do the work, and signed by plaintiff alone, was admitted in evidence over defendants’ objection. It was only admitted after evidence that it was made out in defendants’ presence and assented to by them as containing the terms agreed upon.
While it might not have been the written contract *545of defendants, there was evidence that it was their contract, and assented to as such. To maintain a suit of this kind it is not necessary, of course, that it should be founded on a writing, and, so far as we are advised, this was admitted to show what it was which defendants had agreed to. It is not disclosed in appellants’ abstract how the petition was framed, whether on a written contract or a verbal one.
We are unable to say whether the court committed error in refusing the instruction offered by appellants, for the reason they have not set out in their abstract those given. Those given may have rendered it unnecessary to grant those refused.
The judgment, however, in my opinion, should be reversed, for the reason that the court gave an instruction to allow plaintiff six per cent, interest from demand, when there is no evidence, as presented in the abstract, showing any demand was ever made. Phillips v. Laclede County, 76 Mo. 68; Southgate v. Railway Co., 61 Mo. 89.
As respondent makes no objection to appellants’ abstract, we deem it, under the rules of this court, to be correct.
The institution of a suit is sufficient demand under the statutes, but this is so as a matter of law, by force of the statute. The jury would not know such was the case unless instructed to that effect.
But the majority of the court are of the opinion that the record shows that on the day of an attempted settlement between the parties, when plaintiff gave a receipt to defendant for a payment then made, to-wit, on the seventeenth day of April, 1888, the plaintiff testified that he was dissatisfied therewith, and he immediately brought this suit for the sum thereby claimed by him ; that this was a sufficient • evidence of a demand; and there is nothing in the record to indicate that, if the jury allowed any interest at all, they allowed any anterior to the bringing of the suit; the presumption is that they allowed interest only from that day. That had the in*546struction told the jury to allow interest as from a given time prior to the day named by the witness and the institution of the suit, the instruction would have been bad; but as it only told the jury to find interest from the time of demand, the presumption must be that they respected the evidence and allowed no interest prior to the bringing of the suit.
It, therefore, results that the judgment is affirmed.