Plaintiff and defendant are each corporations, the former of New York and the latter of this State. Plaintiff brought this action on account for “goods, wares and merchandise” sold by it to defendant, amounting in value to $1,160.40. Defendant’s answer set up a counter claim in the total sum of $1,-900. At the trial “defendant, in open court, admitted that plaintiff was entitled to judgment for the amount sued for in the petition.” The trial then proceeded on the counter-claim and resulted in a verdict for plaintiff for the account and against the defendant on the counterclaim.
The court instructed the jury to find for plaintiff for the amount sued for, naming the sum, and interest, naming the amount, making a total which the court stated- to be $1,277.40. This instruction is objected to on the ground that the court should have simply directed a finding for plaintiff and left the jury to fix the amount. We are cited to a class of cases where the Supreme Court and this Court have decided that the trial court must not direct the jury as to the amount they shall find, nor calculate the interest for the jury and direct them to find that sum. [Cates v. Nickell, 42 Mo. 169; Burghart v. Brown, 60 Mo. 24; Poulson v. Collier, 18 Mo. App. 583; Dyer v. Combs, 65 Mo. App. 148; Corbitt v. Mooney, 84 Mo. App. 645; Calkins v. Bank, 99 Mo. App. 509; Dawson v. Wombles, 111 Mo. App. 532; Kroge v. Modern Brotherhood, 126 Mo. App. 693.]
But those cases are not applicable; for here the admission of the defendant left no issue on the amount and was a consent that judgment should be for a certain sum, and the court, if there had been no counterclaim involved, could have discharged the jury and ren*89dered judgment on tbe admission. Besides, the admission that plaintiff was entitled to the judgment, left defendant without any right to complain on account of such judgment.
Defendant states here that “the entire controversy between the parties is with respect to the defective crank shaft”; and, in this connection, objection is made to that portion of plaintiff’s instruction No. 8 which directed the jury that before they could find for defendant on its counterclaim the amount paid to plaintiff for the crank shaft, they must find that defendant fully complied in all respects with its contract for the sale of the crank shaft. The criticism is that the instruction is without support from the evidence, for the reason that the only contract on defendant’s part was to pay for the shaft, and that, it Avas conceded, had been done. That the only other contract on defendant’s part which had been mentioned in the trial was contained in the terms of the invoice made out by plaintiff, which had been excluded by the court. A consideration of the criticism has satisfied us that the part of the instruction objected to could not have, in any way, affected the result, and was therefore altogether harmless. We do not see how it could have influenced the jury against defendant. Especially must this be true in view of the fact that defendant asked and obtained from the court two instructions setting forth, in detail, what the contract was on the part of both plaintiff and defendant, and in one of them informed the jury of what defendant was not required to do in order to maintain the counterclaim. Instructions, thus bearing upon the same part of a case, should be read as a whole, and if in that way the law is correctly declared, there is no error. [Chambers v. Chester, 172 M’o. 461; Norton v. Kramer, 180 Mo. 536; McKinstry v. Transit Co., 108 Mo. App. 12; Hines v. Kansas City, 120 Mo. App. 190.]
*90A review of the various suggestions made by defendant against the judgment has not satisfied us that we have any.right to interfere, and hence we affirm the judgment.
All concur.