— Action on contract alleged in the petition to have been verbally made between plaintiff and defendant for the employment of plaintiff as “resident manager ” of a family hotel operated by defendant in Kansas City, Missouri. Employment is alleged to have begun on February 1, 1900, and continued for •a period of twenty-two and one-half months. Plaintiff says in her petition that no definite amount of salary was agreed upon between her and defendant but that defendant agreed to pay her “a reasonable and fair compensation therefor,” and that $100 per month is *284the reasonable value of her services. She admits receiving payments on account of services performed under said contract aggregating in amount $630, which being applied as a credit on account leaves a remainder, so she alleges of’ $1,620 due her from defendant, for which sum with interest she prays judgment.
The answer is a general denial. A trial of the cause after issue joined resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $607.50 from which after unsuccessfully moving for á new trial and in arrest of judgment defendant prosecutes this appeal.
The evidence is conflicting. Plaintiff on her part introduced substantial evidence in support of the allegations of her petition. Defendant introduced evidence supporting her contention that plaintiff’s employment was not as resident manager but as housekeeper; that the amount of wages plaintiff was to receive was agreed upon and the payments received settled in full her compensation. The jury decided this conflict in plaintiff’s favor. The trial court, in passing upon the motion for new trial, refused to set aside the verdict as being against the weight of the evidence. , Many of the points made by defendant in her brief are predicated either upon the assumption that there was no evidence to sustain the verdict, or that it was against the weight of the evidence. There was sufficient evidence for the jury to consider. In a situation such as this we do not interfere.
Complaint is made of instruction numbered one given on behalf of plaintiff because it failed to limit, the amount of recovery to the amount claimed in the petition. This was error but it was not prejudicial to defendant, the amount of the verdict being much less than that claimed in the petition. [Wagner v. Printing Co., 45 Mo. App. 6.]
Instructions numbered six and seven asked by defendant were properly refused. They told the jury in *285substance there was no evidence that plaintiff was employed by defendant as manager, or that defendant knew that plaintiff was assuming the duties of that position. The rule invoked by defendant in aid of these instructions that, one who voluntarily performs a service for another without the existence of an intention that he is to be paid therefor cannot recover for such services, is without application, for the reason that there was abundant evidence to go to the jury on that very issue — which was the principal bone of contention in the case.
Nor was any error committed in refusing instructions numbered eight, nine, ten and eleven prayed for by defendant, all of which were fully covered by other instructions given on behalf of defendant. [Culverson v. Maryville, 67 Mo. App. 343.]
It is the office of instructions to clearly and concisely present the issues to the jury without unnecessary repetition. Reiteration has a tendency to confuse and mislead by giving undue prominence to certain features of the case, and should be avoided.
We have considered all of the points made by appellant in criticism of the action of the court in the giving and refusing of instructions and find no merit in any of them. The case was fairly presented to the jnry.
In ruling upon the admission of evidence offered the learned trial judge was also free from error. The question of board, room and laundry furnished the plaintiff was not in issue either under the pleadings or the admitted facts in evidence. Witness Campbell was competent to testify upon the subject of the value of plaintiff’s services and the hypothetical question asked him was based upon plaintiff’s evidence as well as upon that of other witnesses. It certainly was not proper for defendant to probe into plaintiff’s matrimonial affairs. Whether or not she is a “double grass widow” has no bearing upon any of the issues of this case, and *286its proof could be offered for no other purpose than tO’ weaken plaintiff’s credibility as a witness — and for this-purpose it was not competent; nor did such matrimonial misfortunes, if they existed, even tend to convict plaintiff of being “something of an adventuress” as urged, in appellant’s brief. Such evidence evidently was intended to prejudice plaintiff before the jury, and was-properly excluded. .
Finally, much is said by appellant relative to improper remarks made by plaintiff’s attorneys in their arguments to the jury. It is unnecessary for us to consider the propriety of the statements in question or the correctness of the action of the court with respect, thereto. The bill of exceptions fails to show the remarks complained of, or that any exception was saved. The point is made for the first time in the motion for new trial and is supported by affidavits. We held in the case of Norton v. Railroad, 40 Mo. App. 649, “the rule in this State is that, improper remarks of counsel are matters of exception and should be shown by the bill of exceptions and not brought to the attention of the trial court by affidavits in support of motions.”
The judgment is affirmed.
All concur.