Christine M. Grunewald, Individually and as of the Will of Henry W. Grunewald, Deceased v. Missouri Pacific Railroad Company, a Missouri Corporation

331 F.2d 983, 1964 U.S. App. LEXIS 5299
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMay 22, 1964
Docket17518
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 331 F.2d 983 (Christine M. Grunewald, Individually and as of the Will of Henry W. Grunewald, Deceased v. Missouri Pacific Railroad Company, a Missouri Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Christine M. Grunewald, Individually and as of the Will of Henry W. Grunewald, Deceased v. Missouri Pacific Railroad Company, a Missouri Corporation, 331 F.2d 983, 1964 U.S. App. LEXIS 5299 (8th Cir. 1964).

Opinion

BLACKMUN, Circuit Judge.

The district court dismissed this diversity action with prejudice for failure to prosecute. The question before us is whether that dismissal constituted an abuse of the court’s discretion.

The plaintiff-appellant, acting individually and as executrix of the will of Henry W. Grünewald, her deceased husband, joined with the sole legatee and the executors of the will of Owen Brewster, deceased, a former United States Senator from the State of Maine, in a complaint, filed February 23, 1962, seeking a determination of their rights in 536 pre-re- *984 organization general mortgage bonds of Missouri Pacific Railroad Company, and in income bonds successor thereto, claimed to have been the property of the decedent Grünewald. The complaint alleged that “In or about 1940” the original bonds “were destroyed by burning”. The railroad’s answer, pleading, among other things, laches and the termination of the designated period during which the exchange of securities in the reorganization could have been effected, was filed on April 6. The case was therefore at issue from and after that date. It was originally set for trial September 10, 1962. According to the bare docket entries four continuances were successively effected:

1. On July 26 the defendant moved for a new trial date. The plaintiffs’ then counsel, a Missouri firm, filed an affidavit in opposition. The case was reset for December 17.

2. On November 30, “by agreement”, the case was reset for March 4, 1963.

3. On February 8, 1963, on the “Court’s own motion”, the case was reset for July 8.

4. On July 8, by “leave and consent”, the case was reset for September 4.

The dismissal was on September 4, 1963, after motion by the defendant.

The docket entries also disclose that by June 1962 interrogatories by the defendant and answers by the plaintiffs had been served and filed; that on February 8, 1963, the plaintiffs’ then counsel presented a stipulation for dismissal without prejudice on behalf of the plaintiffs other than the present appellant; that the action was so dismissed as to those plaintiffs; that with leave of court counsel then withdrew as attorneys for the appellant; and that formal notice of this withdrawal was mailed on the same day by the clerk to the appellant. It was on this occasion that the court on its “own motion” reset the case for tidal on July 8. The clerk’s letter to the plaintiff-appellant at that time stated that this continuance was “to enable you to secure representation”.

The district court file contains the following correspondence:

1. A letter dated April 8, 1963, from the clerk to James C. Toomey, an attorney of Washington, D. C., who theretofore had twice advised the clerk that “This office represents a claim against the estate” of Henry W. Grünewald. This letter informed Mr. Toomey of the caption of the case as revised after the dismissal by the other plaintiffs, of the withdrawal of appellant’s Missouri counsel, of the resetting for July 8, of the giving of advice as to this to the appellant herself on February 8, and of the lack of any new appearance for the appellant up to that time.

2. A letter dated June 13, 1963, from the plaintiff to the court. This recited the death in February of a daughter, the burden of her estate and of the care of the daughter’s three minor orphaned children, illness of the plaintiff, her inability to be ready for trial on July 8, illness of “several necessary witnesses”, inability to engage any new attorney, and her “request that this case be continued for ninety days”.

3. The court’s response, dated June 18, to the plaintiff. This outlined the prior continuances and said

“In view of these facts and circumstances, I do not feel that I can pass the case beyond the timé it is set, since either party is entitled to be heard, and the defendant has indicated that it wanted to be heard and dispose of the case.”

4. A letter dated June 26 from the plaintiff to the court. In it she asked again “for a postponement of ninety or sixty days”. She stated that the earlier continuances were not made upon any request from her and she outlined in some detail the personal difficulties which had beset her in connection with her daughter’s death.

5. A letter dated July 5 from James C. Toomey to the clerk. This recited that the plaintiff had come to his office the day before; that he was informed of the setting of July 8 and of the plaintiff’s request for a further continuance; that *985 Maryland litigation concerning her grandchild’s custody had just been terminated ; and that

“Contingent on the granting of a further continuance I have been retained to represent Christine M. Grünewald, both individually and as the executrix of the will of Henry W. Grünewald, deceased in the above referred to litigation. I intend to associate with myself a member of the Bar of the State of Missouri and will be prepared to proceed with the litigation at any time set by the Court after August 8, 1963.”

He asked for a continuance.

6. A letter dated July 8 from the court to the plaintiff. This read as follows:

“In view of your letter of June 26th, I have this morning reset the above case for Wednesday, September 4, 1963.
“This case has been here for a long time and I will at that time expect to dispose of it.”

7. A letter dated July 8 from the clerk to Mr. Toomey advising him of the resetting for September 4 and enclosing a form for the designation of local counsel.

8. A letter dated July 10 from the clerk to the plaintiff advising her of the resetting for September 4.

9. A letter dated August 31 from Mr. Toomey to the clerk reciting,

“I am unable to represent these parties in this matter. I respectfully request that my name be withdrawn from the case.”

This was received by the clerk on September 3, the day before the trial date.

10. A telegram dated September 3 from Francis C. Pilkerton, a Maryland attorney, to the clerk, stating that counsel for the plaintiff had withdrawn on August 29, that he, Pilkerton, had been asked “on this last working day before trial” to represent her, and that he requested a continuance.

On September 4, at the call, the defendant appeared by counsel and announced that it was ready. No one appeared for the plaintiff. Counsel for the defendant stated that the preparation of the case for trial had been expensive; that they would not agree to any further continuance; and that they asked the court to dismiss the case with prejudice so as to preclude its reinstitution elsewhere at additional expense to the defendant. The court reviewed the history of the case, treated Mr. Pilkerton’s telegram as a motion for continuance, denied that motion, and dismissed the case for failure to prosecute.

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Bluebook (online)
331 F.2d 983, 1964 U.S. App. LEXIS 5299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/christine-m-grunewald-individually-and-as-of-the-will-of-henry-w-ca8-1964.