Tiiis action is based on a charge of fraud in the sale of mining properties in which plaintiffs owned an interest. The judgment in the trial court was for plaintiffs.
Plaintiffs had a contract to work up the “tailings” in the “dump piles” on twelve hundred acres of mining land owned by the Missouri Lead and Zinc Company in Jasper county. They also owned a “steam, jig and sledge mill” in which ore was extracted from the tailings. They made a written contract with defendants whereby they conveyed to them “an undivided one-half interest” in the jig and mill and the contract to work up the tailings. As a part of the consideration for this sale to defendants, they were to build a new mill with a capacity of cleaning one hundred tons of dirt per day, costing $4,500 at a place on said lands to be selected by plaintiffs. The defendants were to render to plaintiffs every two weeks an itemized statement of cost of construction as the work progressed. The cost of the mill was to be paid to defendants out of the net profits derived from the work it turned out in extracting ore. After the mill was a completed structure each party was to “own an undivided one-half interest in the same.” The net profits in the old mill, the one-half of which plaintiffs sold defendants, were to be divided equally between each of the parties and so were those of the new mill after it had been paid for; that is, after defendants were reimbursed for building it, as above stated. '
The defendants built the new mill and reported the cost to plaintiffs at said! sum of $4,500. Both mills were run in the work of extracting ore, the profits from the old one being equally divided, while the profits from the new one were retained by defendants,- to reimburse them for cost of construction.
*305Afterwards, defendants entered into an understanding with. Messrs. Pahner and Stephens whereby the latter were to purchase the whole property for $10,500, of which $5,000 was to be cash and the balance in two notes of $2,750 each, secured on the property. But plaintiffs charge that defendants had conceived the idea of defrauding them and to that end, after having negotiated for the sale with Palmer and Stephens at the price aforesaid, they represented to plaintiffs that they could sell for $7,500 and advised plaintiffs to consent to a sale at that price. Plaintiffs believing that to be the price for which the property was selling, consented to the sale and division of proceeds was made on the basis of a sale for $7,500. When plaintiffs learned that the real price was $10,500 and that defendants had kept $3,000 out of the division, they begun this action.
1. The petition alleges that plaintiffs and defendants were partners ‘ ‘ and as such partners were the joint owners” of the above-mentioned property. The parties seem to have become impressed from the beginning of this controversy that the'question whether there was a partnership was of vital consequence. They seem to have made the controversy at the trial to turn principally on that question and so they have carried it on in the same way in this court. Plaintiffs seem h> have considered it necessary to allege and show that they and defendants were partners as that term is known to the law. And so defendants appear to have become impressed with the idea that if they could show they were not partners with plaintiffs, at least not partners in all of the property, they could escape liability for the fraud charged against them.
In view of some uncontroverted facts in the case, it can make no practical difference whether the parties were partners at all, either in the whole of any part of the property. It is conceded that the parties, plaintiffs and defendants, owned the property in equal parts *306and that they together were working it in extracting ore from the “tailings” on the mining lands aforesaid for their benefit.
In such condition of ownership and operation, the defendants, according to plaintiffs’ charge, discovered a purchaser for the whole property for the price of $10,500. But they falsely represented to plaintiff that the price at which they could sell was $7,500, and so induced plaintiffs to sell, under the impression that the latter sum was the real selling price.. Whether there was a partnership in all the property, or a partnership in a part of the property; or whether the property was held in mere separate ownership of undivided interests, can make no difference. The fraud and deception and injury could take place with either as a base of operations, and plaintiffs ’ right of recovery is not affected by the business relation they bore to defendants, or the nature of their ownership of the property in which all had an interest.
2. Notwithstanding plaintiffs have designated the holdings, interests and relations of the parties as a partnership, yet, since the facts charged give them a cause of action, it is of no consequence if it should be true that their relationship had been erroneously named. Gannon v. Gas Co., 145 Mo. 502.
3. The foregoing disposes of a great part of the case and of an array of authorities on what does and does not constitute a partnership. But there are other points made by defendants to be noticed. Theyanswered by setting up, at length, matter of defense not necessary to set out here. This was struck out on plaintiffs’ motion. They then filed'an amended answer. In.so doing they waived any error'in striking out the original answer. Fuggle v. Hobbs, 42 Mo. 537; Gale v. Foss, 47 Mo. 276.
4. What we have written disposes of defendants’ refused instructions on the question of partnership. But there was evidence going to show that in the di*307vision of the proceeds of the sale, defendants took the two notes of $2,750 each, and that while these were se* cured on the property, yet by reason of the property afterwards depreciating in value, and the uncertainty which came into the contract of lease by reason of forfeiture proceedings, they accepted two thousand dollars in payment of the first note due and lost the one last due entire. Based on this ground defendants asked the court to instruct the jury that if the $3,750 which plaintiffs got as their part of the proceeds of the sale was “of as great or greater value than the money and notes received by defendants,'then there was no fraud,” and the verdict should be for defendants without regard to false representations. In our opinion, the proposition contained in that instruction can not be sustained and' the court properly rejected it. As wrongdoers they can not ask the party whom they deceived to share their loss and misfortune. They took the notes as part of their portion of the sale. The notes represented the amount of money expressed to be payable by them and the loss consequent on subsequent failure to collect them ought not to be divided with plaintiffs.
5. So, in another instruction, the fraud was ignored and defendants sought to have the court declare that if the $3,750 received by plaintiffs as their share of the proceeds of the sale, was as much as their share was really worth, then they could not recover. This was properly refused. Plaintiffs were entitled to one-half the amount received for the whole property. It was not for defendants to sell the whole property at a certain price and then fix a value on plaintiffs’ interest.
6. Defendants asked a reversal on account of the court refusing them a change of venue on account of the alleged prejudice of the judge. The application shows that defendants became aware of the prejudice charged on September 20, and the application itself was filed on the 23d. The counsel for both parties resided in the same town and yet no notice of the application was *308'served. The only pretense of notice was that of defendants’ attorney telephoning to plaintiffs’ attorneys’ stenographer at his office on the 21st, that there would be a change of venue. It was reported to plaintiffs’ attorneys by the stenographer late in the evening’ that defendant’s attorney had telephoned there would be a “change of venue or something of that kind in the Walker case.” The case had been set on the docket at an • earlier dafe and the parties were ready for trial when on 'defendants’ attorney wanting to be absent it was by agreement set down for trial on the 23d. We are satisfied’with the ruling of the trial court. The circumstances shown disclose that defendants were not entitled to the change. The circumstances are wholly unlike those in Douglass v. White, 131 Mo. 228, and Corpenny v. Sedalia, 57 Mo. 88, cited by defendants.
We'have not discussed many of the separate points made by defendants, but what we have said necessarily disposes of them adversely to defendants’ contention. We have not found on the record any reason for disturbing the judgment and it is consequently affirmed.
All concur.