Drake Ex Rel. Imes v. Kansas City Public Service Co.

63 S.W.2d 75, 333 Mo. 520, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 585
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedAugust 12, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 63 S.W.2d 75 (Drake Ex Rel. Imes v. Kansas City Public Service Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Drake Ex Rel. Imes v. Kansas City Public Service Co., 63 S.W.2d 75, 333 Mo. 520, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 585 (Mo. 1933).

Opinions

This is an action for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff while riding a motorcycle on a public street in Kansas City, Missouri. Plaintiff recovered judgment for $12,000 and defendant appealed. The accident occurred February 26, 1928. Plaintiff, Harold Drake, was then about seventeen years old. He was riding on a motorcycle seated behind one Norman Brown who was driving the machine. His evidence tended to show that the motorcycle was proceeding northward on Summit Street between the tracks of defendant's double track street railway when it ran into a hole in the pavement, causing plaintiff to lose his balance and causing his heel to be caught in the wheel of the motorcycle. He received a serious injury which, because of resulting infection, necessitated to be of the leg, the last one near the hip. No point being made here as to the amount of the verdict the character and extent of plaintiff's injury and suffering need not be detailed. The defendant operated a street car system in Kansas City and under its franchise and the city ordinance was required to maintain the pavement at the place where the accident is alleged to have happened. Its obligation so to do is not disputed. Negligence is charged in defendant's alleged failure to maintain the street and pavement at the point in question in reasonably safe condition for travel thereon.

The case has been tried twice. The first trial resulted in a judgment for plaintiff for $5000. On appeal by defendant to the Kansas City Court of Appeals that court reversed the judgment and remanded the case because the trial court had excluded proof offered by defendant of a certain justice of the peace court judgment pleaded by defendant as a bar to plaintiff's action. The Court of Appeals opinion is reported in 41 S.W.2d at page 1066. Thereafter plaintiff filed an amended or supplemental petition upon which the cause was tried the second time. The proceedings relative to said supplemental petition first call for consideration.

The suit was filed in the Circuit Court of Jackson County on April 5, 1928. Plaintiff being a minor, T.W. Imes was regularly appointed by that court next friend for plaintiff for the purpose of instituting and prosecuting the suit which was then brought by the same attorneys who have since prosecuted it. On the next day plaintiff's *Page 526 mother, Stella O'Brien, through the same attorneys, filed suit in the same court for loss of plaintiff's services. Thereafter, on June 18, 1928, in a justice of the peace court in Kansas City, defendant procured the appointment of Stella O'Brien as next friend for the plaintiff and the filing of a suit by plaintiff by said Stella O'Brien as next friend against defendant for $400 damages on account of the injuries suffered by plaintiff in the accident. The justice's record shows suit filed and judgment rendered for plaintiff in said sum of $400 and satisfaction of the judgment entered of record by said Stella O'Brien, next friend, the same day. The attorneys for plaintiff and for Mrs. O'Brien in the circuit court suits were kept in complete ignorance of the justice of the peace court proceedings and had no intimation that an attempt to settle plaintiff's claim was being made or was contemplated until after the judgment in the justice's court had been entered and satisfied of record. Neither plaintiff nor Stella O'Brien was represented or advised by counsel in the justice court proceedings except by counsel for the defendant who acted for both parties, prepared and filed all the pleadings and furnished the justice the forms for his record entries. [Said counsel was not the counsel now representing defendant in this action.] The evidence on the hearing of this branch of the case in the circuit court tends to show that both plaintiff and Stella O'Brien were led by defendant to believe and did believe that it was her individual claim against defendant and not that of plaintiff that was being settled in the justice court. No evidence was heard by the justice.

After the rendition and satisfaction of said judgment in the justice's court defendant filed in the circuit court an amended answer in this case in which it pleaded said judgment of the justice of the peace court as a bar to plaintiff's action. As we are advised by the opinion of the Court of Appeals, the plaintiff pleaded by reply the facts tending to show that the justice's judgment was procured by defendant's fraud and therefore void but did not ask to have it set aside nor, it seems, did he offer proof of the alleged fraud. It appears that the trial court, upon plaintiff's objection to defendant's offer of the justice's judgment in evidence, excluded it. The Court of Appeals held that the justice's judgment, being regular upon its face, was conclusive on the parties and a bar to the prosecution of plaintiff's action "until set aside," and that the trial court had erred in excluding it, for which reason the judgment of the circuit court was reversed and the cause remanded.

Following that reversal the plaintiff tendered and by leave of court filed in the circuit court the supplemental petition now in controversy. It is in two counts. The first is in equity, challenging the validity of the justice's judgment and alleging facts showing its fraudulent character and praying that it be set aside. The second count is at law, pleading plaintiff's cause of action for damages substantially as *Page 527 pleaded in his original petition. Defendant objected, unavailingly, to the filing of the supplemental petition and then, also unsuccessfully, moved to have it stricken out. It declined to plead further to the first count, filed answer to the second count again pleading the justice's judgment in bar of plaintiff's cause of action stated in the second count, and when the court proceeded to try the first count objected fruitlessly to the introduction of evidence thereunder and declined to participate further in the hearing on said first count.

The court heard evidence on said first count and at the conclusion thereof found the issues thereon for the plaintiff, gave interlocutory judgment declaring the justice's judgment fraudulent and void and ordered that the cause proceed to trial and final judgment on the second count of the petition as though the justice's judgment had not been rendered. After verdict thereon the court entered final judgment on the whole case, setting aside the justice's judgment and for plaintiff on the verdict.

[1] I. No contention is made that either count of the petition fails sufficiently to plead facts authorizing the relief sought if the matters pleaded in the first count can be brought into the case by supplemental petition under the circumstances, nor is it urged that the evidence introduced under said first count does not sustain the court's finding thereon. It unquestionably does. Appellant's sole contention here relating to the supplemental petition and the court's action thereon is that by said first count it brings into the case a new and different cause of action not existing when the suit was filed but based upon facts which occurred thereafter, which appellant asserts cannot be done by supplemental petition in the original suit. In this connection appellant concedes that had the alleged fraudulent judgment been rendered prior to the filing of plaintiff's suit in the circuit court he could properly have joined in his petition a count in equity for cancellation thereof with one at law for his damages. That he could do so was correctly decided by this court in Robison v. Floesch Construction Co., 291 Mo. 34, 236 S.W. 332, 20 A.L.R. 1239. [See, also, Courtney v. Blackwell, 150 Mo. 245, 51 S.W. 668.]

We do not agree with appellant's contention.

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Bluebook (online)
63 S.W.2d 75, 333 Mo. 520, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drake-ex-rel-imes-v-kansas-city-public-service-co-mo-1933.