Cross v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Co.

71 Mo. App. 585, 1895 Mo. App. LEXIS 555
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 1, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 71 Mo. App. 585 (Cross v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway 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
Cross v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Co., 71 Mo. App. 585, 1895 Mo. App. LEXIS 555 (Mo. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinions

Eddison, J.

This action is based on an account for legal services rendered by plaintiff for defendant. The plaintiff recovered below.

„■ . Statement. The evidence on plaintiff’s part- tended to show an employment at the stated rate of $600 per year. The evidence in behalf of defendant tended ■ , to show an employment for no fixed sum but depending for the amount of compensation on the value of the services rendered by plaintiff. The employment was made by Mr. Lathrop as the defendant’s solicitor for Missouri, and the tendency of defendant’s evidence was that Mr. Lathrop had no authority, as defendant’s agent, to employ plaintiff for a stated sum per annum. From this contention arises the principal controversy here, the plaintiff contending that Mr. Lathrop’s authority was admitted by the defendant’s answer and the defendant denying that the answer makes such admission. It being conceded that if not admitted it should have been proven by plaintiff. In order that our view as to the proper construction of the answer may be made to appear more satisfactory, we will set forth a copy of the petition and answer.

"Petition The petition, after some formal allegations, including that of defendant’s being a corporation,’continues: “For cause of action against the defendant, the plaintiff states that the defendant is indebted to him in the sum of $1,250 for legal services rendered to defendant as attorney and counsel for defendant in and for Clinton county, Missouri, from January 1, 1889, to December 81, 1891, which services were rendered at the instance and request of defend[587]*587ant, and. for which the defendant agreed and promised to pay plaintiff the sum of $600 per annum; that plaintiff demanded of defendant payment of said sum on the third day of December, 1891; that defendant failed and refused to pay the same; that said sum of $1,250 re-, mains due and unpaid, and for which, with six per cent interest from December 3, 1891, plaintiff prays judgment.”

The answer of defendant to this petition is as follows: “Now comes the defendant, and for answer to the petition of the plaintiff herein admits that it is a corporation as in said petition charged, and that it employed plaintiff to act as its local attorney in Clinton county, in the state of Missouri, but defendant denies that it ever at any time agreed or promised to pay plaintiff a yearly or monthly salary of any sum or amount. On the contrary, defendant avers and charges the faet'to be that under the contract and agreement between plaintiff and defendant it was expressly agreed and understood that the compensation to be paid plaintiff for his services was dependent entirely upon the amount and value of the services rendered by him; that he was to render from time to time an account of the services rendered and make a reasonable charge for the same; and in the event of any controversy between him and the defendant' about the amouiit of any of his said charges the same were to be referred to the then acting general solicitor of the defendant for final adjustment.

“Defendant states that plaintiff has failed and refused to render to defendant an itemized account of the services rendered by him, in accordance with the terms of his said employment, and the amount thereof has never been agreed upon between the plaintiff and the defendant; that prior to this suit a controversy existed and now exists between plaintiff and defendant about [588]*588the amount of his charges, and that the general solicitor of defendant has never adjusted the amount due for plaintiff’s said services. Defendant states that this was the only contract ever entered into by it with the plaintiff, and it denies each and every allegation in said petition contained not expressly admitted.”

agent: construegeneraband^ei' special agency. From the mere reading of the answer, as applied to the allegations of the petition, it is apparent that an employment of plaintiff by defendant for the performance of legal services at some compensation is admitted; and that the . , / only thing m that connection which is denied by the answer relates solely to the mode or amount of compensation which plaintiff was to receive for such services. This employment charged by plaintiff and admitted by defendant was made through Mr. Lathrop as agent for defendant. Therefore when defendant admits the employment, it of course admits the authority of the agent who made such employment. So that the question reduces itself to a mere understanding of language which we think can have but one meaning, and that it can bear no other construction than what it plainly says. That the answer was so understood and treated by defendant’s counsel at the trial is made plain by an instruction-which was given at defendant’s instance in the following words: “The defendant does not deny that it employed plaintiff to act as its attorney in Clinton county, nor does it deny that it owes the plaintiff for such services as he performed for it while acting as its attorney, but the question as to which they differ is in respect to the terms of that employment. The plaintiff contends that he was employed by the year at a salary of six hundred dollars per annum. This the defendant denies and contends that the employment was for no specified time and that the compensation was to be determined by the services [589]*589actually rendered by him for the defendant. The burden of proof is upon the plaintiff to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that he was employed by the year at a salary of $600 per annum.”

We entertain no doubt that under the answer a question of Mr. Lathrop’s authority could not arise. The evident meaning of the answer is, as stated in the foregoing instruction, that no denial of authority was made, but on the contrary was admitted.

The only possible way to bring in a question of the agént’s authority is to say that the answer admits he had authority to employ plaintiff as such attorney for Clinton county at a compensation depending upon the service's rendered, but not to admit he had authority to employ plaintiff at the compensation of a stated sum. In other words this contention amounts to this; that Mr. Lathrop had authority to make the employment and to agree upon a compensation, but not the compensation which plaintiff claims. In considering the case from.the point of view just suggested we shall treat Mr. Lathrop as the defendant’s general agent for the purpose of employing local attorneys in Missouri. The evidence on defendant’s part shows that he was in charge of defendant’s legal business in Missouri and a small portion of Iowa and that he was authorized to employ local attorneys in the different counties for a compensation, though that evidence does further show that such compensation was to be reasonable charges for services, and from time to time to send bills to him; and that if a controversy arose over the charges it should be submitted to the general solicitor for the defendant. Mr. Lathrop was thus made the general agent of defendant. He exercised his own choice in selecting the local attorneys. The agency was none the less a general agency because it did not extend over the whole business of his principal. [590]*590“A man may have many general agents, one to buy cotton, another to buy wheat, and another to buy horses. So he may have a general agent to buy cotton in one neighborhood, and another general agent to buy cotton in another neighborhood.

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Bluebook (online)
71 Mo. App. 585, 1895 Mo. App. LEXIS 555, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cross-v-atchison-topeka-santa-fe-railway-co-moctapp-1895.