Cooper v. Armour & Co.

15 S.W.2d 940, 222 Mo. App. 1176, 1929 Mo. App. LEXIS 87
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 11, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 15 S.W.2d 940 (Cooper v. Armour & Co.) 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
Cooper v. Armour & Co., 15 S.W.2d 940, 222 Mo. App. 1176, 1929 Mo. App. LEXIS 87 (Mo. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

*1177 BLAND, J.

This is an appeal from an order or judgment overruling plaintiff’s motion to vacate a judgment in favor of plaintiff and against the defendant.

The facts show that on the 5th "day of March, 1925, Messrs. Pross T. Cross and Maurice P. Murphy, attorneys at law, filed in the circuit court -of Buchanan county a suit for damages in the name of plaintiff and against the defendant. The petition - alleged that on the 1st day of February, 1921, plaintiff, while employed by the defendant in its packing plant in St. Joseph, was injured by falling into an elevator shaft in one of the defendant’s buildings, said fall having resulted from the negligence of the defendant. Damages were prayed in the petition in the sum of $3000. On March 7, 1925, before the return day of the writ of summons but after it had been served, defendant, without, notice to plaintiff, entered its appearance confessed judgment in the amount sued for and paid that sum to the clerk of the court in • satisfaction of the judgment. At the time of the filing of plaintiff’s suit, Cross and Murphy also brought suit for her husband for loss of her services and founded upon plaintiff’s injuries. On the llth day of March, 1925, plaintiff through her present attorneys, John S. Boyer and the firm of Mosman, Rogers & Buzard, filed a motion in the case to set aside the judgment and “vacate proceedings.” This motion alleged that plaintiff had not employed Cross and Murphy to institute a suit for her and prayed that the judgment rendered in her favor, and all proceedings pertaining thereto, be set aside so that she might institute a suit against defendant to recover damages in the sum of $50,000, which she alleged-was the amount.of defendant’s indebtedness to her by reason of the injuries .sustained by her. This motion was verified by plaintiff’s oath. The motion was overruled by the court, resulting in this appeal.

It .was plaintiff’s contention at the trial of her motion that she never at any time employed either Cross or Murphy to institute suit for her but that they wore employed by her husband so to do without her knowledge and consent. ■ At the opening of the trial, plaintiff voluntarily took the witness stand and testified as follows; that her injuries were the .result of a fall down an elevator shaft in defendant’s packing plant in St. Joseph, Missouri, under circumstances showing negligence on the part of defendant; that she fell about three floors and sustained serious injuries, consisting, in part, of “a broken pelvis” and a fracture of her .right limb about two inches above the. knee. She testified that she was in the hospital as the result of these injuries for five months; that the bones of her right limb protruded.through the flesh; that she has a running sore on her limb now and that she is unable to get around in her home without the aid of a crutch and when she goes on the street she is compelled *1178 to use two crutches. There seems to be no dispute that plaintiff received severe injuries.

Plaintiff testified that she first learned on March 7, 1925, of the fact that suit had been filed in her behalf by Cross and Murphy, when she read it in a St. Joseph newspaper published in the city where she lived. She further testified that she had been negotiating with a claim agent of the defendant in reference to a settlement of her case and that she did not feel that it was necessary to employ attorneys to represent her and that she had not done so; that she learned of the judgment on Saturday and on the following Monday she called up Kansas City over the long distance telephone for Mr. Mosman, of the firm of attorneys who now represent her, and talked with Mr. .Rogers of that firm, Mr. Mosman being ill; that she had been advised by her father that if she needed attorneys to employ the firm of Mosman, Rogers & Buzard. It appears that her father lived in the country near St.. Joseph and would visit - plaintiff periodically and on one or more of these visits gave plaintiff this advice; according to her testimony.

On cross-examination plaintiff testified that she had talked several times with the claim agent of defendant and had been offered the sum of $1500 in addition to the payment of her hospital and other expenses in settlement of her case and that he finally asked her if she would be'satisfied with the sum of $2500; that she refused both of these sums; that she last saw him about three weeks before the suit was filed but that he had mentioned the sum of $2500 before that time. She denied that she had consulted any lawyers about filing suit for her before the suit was filed. She testified that a member of a firm of lawyers, other than Cross and Murphy, called on her on-afternoon and solicited her case and she refused to employ that firm; that she told him that she had no need for lawyers and would not employ them; that a solicitor from this firm was there several times; that Mr. Murphy ivas at her house several times, “he had been chasing my husband ever since I got hurt.”

Plaintiff further testified that she knew her husband also was entitled to sue; that while she and her husband were on good terms,, they did not discuss their cases; that “we had not discussed cases very much because I was not well ... I asked my father’s advice in this case-;” that she knew her husband talked to Cross and Murphy about bringing 7ns suit; that she knew that he was going to employ them and that she saw him sign a contract with them at her house. This, the evidence shows, was on February 23, 1925. She further testified that on this occasion Cross and Murphy were present at her home; that this was the only time Cross was in her home and that when he came there he was a stranger to her; that Cross and Murphy on this occasion asked her if she did not “want to file suit” *1179 and she stated, “No, I am not ready to file a suit;” that she emphatically told them that she not only did not want to file a suit but that she did not “ever want them to file a suit” for her. That Eggleston, the solicitor for the other firm of lawyers which we have mentioned, arrived at the house before Cross and Murphy came there and was there during their call but left before they did; that she signed a statement at the request of Cross and Murphy of the facts of this meeting; that this statement was to be used in her husband’s case; that she did not know where the statement was at the time of the trial; that she signed her name to no other statement.

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Bluebook (online)
15 S.W.2d 940, 222 Mo. App. 1176, 1929 Mo. App. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-armour-co-moctapp-1929.