Rice, Stix & Co. v. McClure & Harper

Gill, J.

Statement — In February, 1896, the plaintiffs, wholesale merchants at St. Louis, sued defendants on an account of $824.63 for goods sold and delivered, the petition being in the usual form. Shortly before that (in January, 1896) the defendants made a voluntary assignment under the statute and at the institution of this suit the assignees had qualified and were in possession of the assignors’ property. In April, 1896, the assignees, in pursuance of the assignment statute, and after, due' notice given, sat for the allowance of claims, and the plaintiffs then and there presented their said account (the same they had already sued on) and the assignee allowed the same and issued to the plaintiffs a certificate to that effect. After this allowance the assignees paid dividends to the various creditors and plaintiffs received and accepted their portion which was fifty per cent on their claim as allowed.

At the October term, 1896, defendants filed their answer to plaintiffs on account wherein they set up the facts relating to said assignment, allowance and payments by the assignee,, etc., as above stated. Thereupon the cause was tried before the court sitting as a jury — the parties conceding the facts as above stated. The bill of exceptions then recites that: “After the trial the plaintiffs asked leave to amend their petition so as to set forth the facts detailed in the *382second count of defendants’ answer (the same as above stated), and to pray for judgment on the assignees’ judgment instead of judgment on the account as set forth in plaintiffs’ petition.” This amendment the court allowed, over the defendants’ objection; and then gave judgment for plaintiff on the balance due them on the claim as evidenced by the assignees’ judgment.

After an ineffectual motion for new trial defendants brought the case here by writ of error.

AS?gn“e'sTjudgThat the allowance of plaintiffs’ demand by the assignees was to all intents and purposes a judgment — with “all the force, effect and con-elusive attributes of any other judgment.” —is no longer an open question m this state. Slate Co. v. Cornice Co., 62 Mo. App. 569; Kendrick v. Mfg. Co., 60 Mo. App. 22; Boiler Works v. Haydock, 59 Mo. App. 653; Eppright v. Kaufmann, 90 Mo. 25. And. being a judgment it extinguished the original demand or cause of action on the account. The account became merged in the judgment and no longer existed. If then a plaintiff bring two actions for the same cause a judgment in one is a bar to the other. 1 Herman on Estop., sec. 244. So then it would seem clear that under the conceded facts of this case plaintiffs’ demand had, before the trial, been reduced or merged into a judgment and an action was no longer maintainable thereon.

Action: petition: amendment. However plaintiffs’ counsel sought to avoid defeat in '.he action by amending the petition so as to sue on the assignees’ judgment. But this wjj[ B0{; save the case, for the judgment (or allowance by the assignee) did not exist at the institution of this suit; this action was commenced in February while the assignees’ judgments was not rendered until in the April following. It is well settled *383that the cause of action must be complete at the beginning of the suit. “Filing an amended petition does not open up to plaintiff a cause of action accruing after the original petition was filed.” Davis v. Clark, 40 Mo. App. 515. So then the plaintiffs must fail to recover on any theory — on the account, because it has become merged in the judgment, and on the judgment because it did not exist at the institution of the suit.

Judgment reversed.

All concur.