Daugherty v. Parsons

120 S.E. 519, 95 W. Va. 211, 1923 W. Va. LEXIS 235
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 11, 1923
StatusPublished

This text of 120 S.E. 519 (Daugherty v. Parsons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daugherty v. Parsons, 120 S.E. 519, 95 W. Va. 211, 1923 W. Va. LEXIS 235 (W. Va. 1923).

Opinion

Meredith, Judge:

Plaintiffs instituted this action upon notice of motion in the circuit court of Cabell County to recover $3000 for securing the dismissal of certain civil actions pending therein, in which C. T. Benton was the plaintiff and the defendants and a corporation in which defendants were interested were parties defendant. The court set aside a verdict for the plaintiffs on the ground that the same was contrary to the law and the evidence, and granted defendants a new trial. Plaintiffs seek a reversal of that judgment.

That an agreement was entered into between plaintiffs and defendants whereby the latter agreed to pay plaintiffs a fee of $3000 for procuring a dismissal of the suits is not seriously denied in this court, although it was below. Neither can it be contended that plaintiffs did not perform their part of the contract. The sole question, as presented here, is whether the contract upon which this action is brought is an agreement legally binding upon the defendants.

"We are again confronted with the situation of a jury’s verdict arrived at under appropriate instructions from the court, on the one hand, and the judgment of that court setting aside the verdict, on the other. We discussed our practice in cases of this kind in the recent case of St. Clair v. Jaco, decided this term, and it need only be said that it depends largely upon the circumstances of each case as it arises whether the verdict or the judgment shall control. We first considered this case with the view of indulging all reasonable doubts in favor of the jury’s finding; then, following the rule which requires us to accord special weight to the order of the trial court setting aside the verdict, we viewed the evidence from what must have been the trial court’s viewpoint. The account of the evidence which follows is the result of these analyses.

*213 The record shows that the civil suits which the defendants, J. K. Parsons and A. F. Parsons, sought to have dismissed, involved alleged claims against them and a corporation, in which they were interested, aggregating $425,000 or more, and that defendants, partly through their agent, Fisher, and partly in person, agreed to pay plaintiffs a fee of $3000 to get rid of these suits. This of course was an eminently proper arrangement. There had been some negotiation through Fisher as to the price to be paid, but it is clear from plaintiff’s statement of the case that $3000 was the amount agreed upon. As witnesses in their own behalf, the defendants attempt to deny that such an agreement was ever entered into; all that need be said upon that point, however, is that the evidence as a whole, including several of defendants’ own statements, proves beyond reasonable doubt that such an agreement was made, and was carried out, and that defendants well understood what the price was to be.

The chief controversy both as to law and fact concerns the agreement of the parties as to the method to be employed in effecting a dismissal of the Benton suits. It is this part of the agreement which has created the difficulty both in the circuit court and here. We think the facts of this important phase of the case are substantially as follows: In the first place, it appears that plaintiff Daugherty, through professional relations and otherwise, had gained some, if not considerable, knowledge of Benton’s affairs. True, he says he had not represented Benton, but he had represented Benton’s wife in some controversy concerning an automobile, and in his testimony he admits knowing sufficient facts concerning Benton to practically assure a conviction on the criminal charge of forgery. Equipped with this knowledge and. information, he consented to the proposal of Fisher, defendants ’ agent, to secure the dismissal of the civil suits, and attended two conferences with defendants for the purpose of working out a plan to accomplish the desired dismissals. At the first of these conferences other attorneys were present, and they refused to be parties to the plan Daugherty proposed. At the second conference, there were no other lawyers, and Daugherty outlined his plan of action more fully. He sug *214 gested that in order to procure a dismissal of the suits they have warrants issued against Benton in the county of Mercer, charging him with forgery, and that they prosecute him on those charges. As to this much of the plan there is little serious controversy in the record. The differences arise over the objects of this prosecution as explained by the various parties. It should be obvious enough that in prosecuting any person on criminal charges, the only proper immediate object should be to satisfy the requirements of public justice by a conviction of the defendant, if guilty, or by an acquittal, if innocent. It must certainly not be for the purpose of scaring or driving the defendant out of the court’s jurisdiction, thus robbing instead of satisfying justice. Whether or not those interested in the prosecution may properly have other indirect objects in mind, it is not necessary to consider at this point. As we develop the theory of the defense, the importance of these principles will be observed.

Plaintiffs introducd three witnesses who testified regarding the dismissal of the suits and the Benton prosecution. The first of these was Daugherty. At one point he states: “There was no object in my mind and it was not discussed about running him out of the country, or running him away at that time; my purpose was to have the warrant issued and convict him because of the fact that he was guilty.” Again, he says: “I can convict that man, I know it. I can rid you of this trouble and stop this robbery and thieving and perpetrating these crimes that has been going on, with Benton the cause of it.” These statements plainly support the conclusion, strongly urged by plaintiffs, that their object in initiating this prosecution was to bring a guilty person to justice. We do not think, however, that upon this record these statements can be considered alone. Other portions of Daugherty’s testimony and statements of Fisher and plaintiff Young are also to be considered and they are not altogether consistent with Daugherty’s testimony quoted above. It was brought out early in the examination of Daugherty that it had not been entirely out of the minds of the parties that the criminal prosecution might result in Benton’s leaving the state, in which event a dismissal of the civil suits would *215 probably follow. Daugherty, however, maintained that while this was suggested by A. F. Parsons, such was not his, Daugherty’s object. He stoutly insisted, as above shown, that he was confident that the result of the proceedings would be a conviction. As a closing statement, however, when he was being examined on another matter, that is, whether he had intimated to defendants that a settlement with Benton might be effected, he said: “No', sir, I didn’t say that, nor did I intimate any such statement that they would have to pay Benton any sum of money.

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Bluebook (online)
120 S.E. 519, 95 W. Va. 211, 1923 W. Va. LEXIS 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daugherty-v-parsons-wva-1923.