Court Opinion

ID: 8264819
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-16 15:59:44.27+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:43:18.520942
License: Public Domain

BLAND, P. J.
(dissenting). — The action is to recover an alleged balance of $648.80, for goods, wares and merchandise alleged to have been sold and delivered by plaintiff to defendant at his special instance and request. The petition states that an itemized statement of the account is filed with the petition and made a part thereof. Omitting caption, the answer is as follows:
“Comes the defendant in the' above-entitled cause and for his amended answer and counterclaim, to plaintiff’s petition herein, admits that for the period of time covered by statement of account in plaintiff’s petition, parties plaintiff and defendant had. an open, mutual and running account, but denies each and every other allegation therein contained.
“A.nd for further defense and counterclaim to the cause of action set up in plaintiff’s petition, defendant says, that on the twenty-second day of August, 1904, defendant sold and delivered to plaintiff-bushels of clean wheat, at and for the agreed price and sum of four hundred dollars for which no credit is given defendant in plaintiff’s statement.
“And July 14, 1905, paid by check $31.40, on the account to J. S. Medley and no credit therefor has been given defendant by plaintiff thereon.
“For another and further defense, defendant by way of counterclaim says that on April 2, 1904, he gave to plaintiff his check on the Cape Girardeau County Savings Bank, for the sum of fifty dollars, and that said check was duly paid to plaintiff and no credit entered on plaintiff’s books to the defendant for the sum of fifty dollars.
“And for further answer by way of counterclaim defendant says that plaintiff on the-day of —--, 190 — , took from defendant at the price and sum of $46.25 certain lumber and failed to give credit thereon.
*344“For another, further and different answer to plaintiff’s petition herein, defendant says, that plaintiff seeks to charge him with the debt of others, viz., with the debt of Chris Surface, in the sum of eighty-seven' dollars and ninety-five cents; with the debt of Bill Welker, in the sum of eighty-nine dollars and ninety-five cents; with the debt of Levi Cole in the sum of fifty-three dollars and no cents; with the debt of Prank Goodman, in the sum of twenty dollars and sixty-five cents; with the debt of Jake Surface in the sum of seventy-four dollars and fifty-five cents; that no promise ivas made by defendant, to plaintiff to answer for the debts of the parties above mentioned and that no memoranda in writing of any such contract, nor any other writing subscribed by defendant or any other person by him authorized to subscribe such contract or writing, was ever given.
“Wherefore, the defendant says that on the-day of, 1906, before the commencement of this action plaintiff was indebted to defendant in the sum of two hundred and four dollars, for which, with costs, he prays judgment.”
1. Plaintiff recovered judgment for $476.80, from which defendant appealed. The abstracts are in^such condition as to preclude us from looking into the evidence or reviewing any of the errors alleged to have intervened at the trial, so there is nothing before us for review but the record proper. There are one hundred and sixty items in the account filed with the petition, in no one of which the article or merchandise sold is named or described. The first, fifteen items of the account are as follows:
“March 9, to merchandise by Chris. Surface_$3.(30
“ 15, to merchandise by Chris. Surface.... 1.95
“ 22, to merchandise by Chris. Surface. ... 2.00
“ 30, to merchandise by Chris. Surfaced. 7' 6.00
April 4, to merchandise by Chris. Surface_■ 2.00
*345April 4, to merchandise by Bill Welker ...... 3.00
“ 9, to merchandise by Bill Welker.3.00
“ 9, to merchandise by Chris. Surface.... 2.80
“ 9, to merchandise by Goodman.25
“ 13, to merchandise by Goodman...!.7.80
“ 15, to merchandise by Bill Welker.3.10
“ 15, to merchandise by Ohris. Surface.... 3.90
“ 16, to merchandise by Cole. 7.55
“ 23, to merchandise by Chris. Surface.... 2.40
“ 23, to merchandise by Bill Welker. 5.00”
The remainder of the items are exactly like these exceptúas to date, the name of the person to whom the merchandise was furnished, and the amount, and every item in the account is noted as merchandise bought by some person other than defendant. Defendant contends that the itemized account does not meet the requirements of the statute (sec. 630, Ann. Stat., 1906) and is insufficient to bar another action and therefore insufficient to support the judgment. The section (630) requires the party in his petition on an account, to either set forth the items of the account in the petition, “or attach to his pleading, referring to it therein, a copy of the account, which shall be a part of the petition.” By virtue of this section the account filed with plaintiff’s petition is a part of the petition itself. [Coombs Com. Co. v. Block, 130 Mo. 668, 32 S. W. 1139; Connor v. Heman, 44 Mo. App. 346.]
In Rechnitzer v. Vogelsang, 117 Mo. App. 1. c. 149, 93 S. W. 326, the following account filed before a justice of the peace was held insufficient to support a judgment:
“Mr. Henry Vogelsang, acct. for Edw. J., 10th and Olive.
To Mdse, as per bills.$68.00
To Mdse, as per bills. 11.80
$79.80
*3461903.
June 9, by cash .$5
June 16, by cash . 2 7.00
Balance due.$72.80”
Defenses of this character may be taken advantage of by motion to make the pleading more definite, or by objection to the introduction of any evidence on the pleading. But there is no rule of practice that requires a party to notify his adversary of fatal defects in his pleadings; and a petition that wholly fails to state any cause of action may be taken advantage of by motion in arrest of judgment, or the attention of the court may be called to it for the first time on appeal. [Peltz v. Eichele, 62 Mo. 171; Nance v. Railway, 79 Mo. 196; Ward v. Railway, 91 Mo. 1. c. 171, 3 S. W. 481.]
2. Section 604, Ann. Stat., 1906, says: “The an-swier of the defendant shall contain: First, a general or specific denial of each material allegation of the petition controverted by the defendant,” etc. Section 628, of the ‘Code, provides: “Every material allegation' of the petition not controverted by the answer, . . . shall, for the purposes of the action, be taken as true,” etc. Under these sections all material allegations in the petition, not denied by the answer, shall be taken as confessed. [Marshall v. Insurance Co., 43 Mo. 586; Billings v. Iron & Rail Co., 86 Mo. App. 228; State ex rel. v. Henderson, 86 Mo. App. 482.] The answer is somewhat involved but we do not think it is evasive. In the last paragraph of the answer objections to the sufficiency of the account are stated. The first paragraph admits there was a running account between plaintiff and defendant during the period of time covered by plaintiff’s statement, but there is no admission that the account sued on is the true account between the parties during that period, and the concluding clause of the paragraph is a denial of each and every *347other allegation in the petition, and as the account is a part of the petition, we think this clause is a denial of the correctness of the account. The account filed with the petition being wholly insufficient to bar another action on the same cause of action, the petition is fatally defective. But it is suggested that the account is aided by the answer. ' The answer states that for the period of time covered by the statement of account there, was an open and mutual account between plaintiff and defendant. The omission to state the year or years in which the merchandise was sold and delivered is aided by the answer, but the year or years in which the account accrued is not the only or the principal omission to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The statute, and the rules of pleading require that the items of the account shall be stated with sufficient definiteness to identify the particular items of merchandise sold and delivered to defendant, or to the persons named in the account on his order. Not an article of merchandise is stated in the petition, or in the account filed with the petition and made a part of it. Every entry in the account is “to merchandise.” Merchandise may mean cambric needles or crow bars, sugar or vinegar, Coates No. 200 cotton thread or two inch cable rope, or it may mean any one of the hundreds of articles classed as merchandise. On such a petition the plaintiff would not be confined to prove any statement of a fact, but the scope of the petition would allow him to prove any one of the hundreds of articles classed as merchandise to establish any one or all of the so-called items of his account and if he did not succeed in proving any one of the one hundred and sixty items, by directing his evidence to a particular article he could experiment with another and so on through the hundreds of articles coming within the definition of merchandise, or until he hit upon one . that suited his purpose. To hold that such a statement *348is an itemized account, or a statement of a cause of action, would be to fly in the teeth of the statute requiring an itemized statement of the account and to violate the other statute of the Code, requiring a plain and concise statement of facts constituting the cause of action. The petition, of which the account constitutes the gist of the action, is not only defective but fails to state any cause of action. I think the judgment should be'reversed and the cause remanded.