Brinton v. Thomas

119 S.W. 1016, 138 Mo. App. 64, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 354
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 31, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 119 S.W. 1016 (Brinton v. Thomas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brinton v. Thomas, 119 S.W. 1016, 138 Mo. App. 64, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 354 (Mo. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J.

— Plaintiff Nettie Brinton and appellant Jessie Winter Brown were the daughters of Judge Thomas H. Parrish and Susan A. Parrish. At the time of his death which occurred in 1897, Judge Parrish was judge of the circuit court of Buchanan county. His widow and his said daughters were his sole survivors. He left personal property, including life insurance, of the value of about six thousand dollars and a homestead in St. Joseph, all of which he devised by his will to his widow. Mrs. Parrish died intestate at Tipton, Moniteau county, November 19, 1907, leaving her said daughters her sole heirs. Her estate consisted of personal property valued at about four thousand dollars and the real estate in St. Joseph left by her husband. From July, 1901, to the day of her death, Mrs. Parrish lived with the Brinton family and her son-in-law, T. J. Brinton, acted as her agent in business affairs. In 1902, while living with the Brintons at Kansas City, she suff fered a stroke of apoplexy accompanied by paralysis of her left side and, thereafter, to her death, was an in[69]*69valid. After her death, letters of administration were issued by the probate court of Moniteau county to A. J. Thomas who qualified as administrator and took charge of her estate. Among her papers, the administrator found a promissory note of $8,059.60, dated March 18, 1907, executed to Mrs. Parrish by plaintiff T. J. Brinton. This action was begun in the probate court of Moniteau county by plaintiffs T. J. and Nettie Brinton on the following demand:

“The Estate of Susan A. Parrish, deceased, “To T. J. Brinton and Nettie Brinton, Dr.:
“To board, washing, &c., for 26 weeks, from July 1st, 1901, to January 18th, 1902, at $4.00 per week..................$ 104.00
“To board, washing, nursing and care of said Susan A. Parrish, while a helpless invalid, from January 18th, 1902, to . November 19,1907, being five years and ten months, or 306 weeks at $25.00 per week............................ 7,650.00
“To two tickets to St. Joseph and one ticket to return......................... 10.95
$ 7,764.95
“Credit by note dated March 18th, 1907, payable to Mrs. Ann Parrish, signed by T. J. Brinton, for balance due.......... 3,059.60
“Balance due..................$ 4,705.35”

No answer was filed in the probate court but the allowance of the demand was resisted by Mrs. Brown, the remaining heir. Plaintiffs were successful in that court and Mrs. Brown appealed to the circuit court where the cause was tried to a jury at the May term, 1908. The verdict returned May 7th was “for the defendant in the sum of three thousand forty-eight [70]*70($3,048.65) dollars and sixty-five cents.” On the same day, the court entered judgment on this verdict as follows: “It is therefore by the court ordered, adjudged and decreed that the defendant A. J. Thomas, administrator of the estate of Susan A. Parrish, deceased, have and recover of the plaintiff, T. J. Brinton, the sum of three thousand forty-eight 65.100 dollars ($3,048.65) and have execution therefor,' and further that said administrator have and recover from the plaintiffs the costs in the case and have thereof execution.”

On the next day at the same term of court plaintiffs filed a motion for a new trial, assigning a number of errors as grounds for the relief asked. On August 1st following, and during an adjourned session of the May term, Mrs. Brown filed a motion to correct the judgment, the object of the movant being to have judgment rendered in favor of the administrator against Mrs. Brinton as well as against her husband, T. J. Brinton. This motion and the motion of plaintiffs for a new trial were taken under advisement until the following term of court. At that term, the court sustained Mrs. Brown’s motion and rendered the following judgment: “It is therefore by the court ordered, adjudged and decreed that the defendant, A. J. Thomas, administrator of the estate of Susan Ann Parrish, deceased, have and recover of the plaintiffs, T. J. Brinton and Nettie Brinton, the sum of three thousand forty-eight 65-100 dollars ($3,048.65) and the costs in the case, and have thereof execution.”

. The proceedings following the rendition of this judgment thus are stated in the record: “That, thereafter, towit, the said 8th day of September, 1908, the plaintiffs, by their counsel, leave of court first had and obtained, amended their motion for a new trial heretofore filed in this cause, which amended motion for a new trial is as follows, towit: [71]*71grant them a new trial, for the following reasons: First- — Because the verdict is against the law as declared by the court. Second — Because the verdict is against the evidence and against the weight of the evidence. Third — Because instructions numbered — and — given by the court at request of appellant against the objection of plaintiffs are incorrect. Fourth — Because the verdict of the jury against the plaintiffs not allowing them anything for six years’ service in boarding, nursing and caring for deceased, shows said verdict to be the result of bias and prejudice on the part of the jury against the plaintiffs. Fifth — Because M'r. Gabbert, attorney for appellant, in his opening statement to the jury, stated to them that the offset to plaintiff’s demand, consisting of a note given by the plaintiff, T. J. Brinton to deceased, was made up of checks forged by T. J. Brinton, which was untrue, and was not an issue in said cause, and had a tendency to and did prejudice the jury against the plaintiffs. Sixth — Because said Gabbert, on numerous occasions, during the progress of the trial, referred to said note and set-off as consisting of moneys of the deceased, which had been drawn on forged checks or orders, all which references were contrary to the rulings of the court and had a tendency to, and did prejudice the minds of the jury against the plaintiffs. Seventh- — Because, during the trial of this cause, one — Brown, the husband of appellant, living in St. Joseph, filed an affidavit there, on which a warrant was issued against the plaintiff, T. J. Brinton, on which warrant an officer of that city arrested said plaintiff during the trial of the cause, for the sole purpose of creating a sentiment against the plaintiffs. Eighth — Because it has come to the knowledge of plaintiffs’ counsel, since the trial of said cause, that deceased had distributed a considerable amount of her estate prior to her death, which -was not known to them prior to the trial, but was known to the appellant, who was a distributee and which accounts in large measure for the shrinkage [72]*72of said estate, which fact was largely dwelt upon by counsel for appellant in his argument to the jury. Ninth — Because upon the law and the evidence, the verdict should have been for the plaintiffs. Tenth — Because the court erred in rendering a verdict against the plaintiff, Nettie Brinton, for the amount of the note of T. J. Brinton to Ann Parrish, to which note she was not a party.”

[70]*70“Come now the plaintiffs and move the court to set aside the verdict of the jury in the above cause and
[72]*72“And now here on said 8th day of September, 1908, during the regular September, 1908, term, the plaintiffs, by their counsel, leave of court first had and obtained, refile in said cause their motion for a new trial herein as amended.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
119 S.W. 1016, 138 Mo. App. 64, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brinton-v-thomas-moctapp-1909.