Eberhardt v. Harkless

115 F. 816, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 4974
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Missouri
DecidedMay 12, 1902
DocketNo. 2,472
StatusPublished

This text of 115 F. 816 (Eberhardt v. Harkless) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eberhardt v. Harkless, 115 F. 816, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 4974 (circtwdmo 1902).

Opinion

PHILIPS, District Judge.

At the trial of this case to a jury tne •court directed a verdict for the defendants on the plaintiff’s testimony. The only question to be determined on this motion is as to whether ■•that direction was correct, regardless of any reasons assigned by the -court in passing upon the demurrer to the evidence.

[817]*817The theory of the plaintiff’s petition is that he had a contract with the Missouri & Kansas Telephone Company, through its agents and representatives, in settlement of a claim for personal injury received by him while in the employ of the company; the substance of which is that, in addition to the sum of $150, paid him on said settlement, for which he gave a receipt in full, there was the further consideration that the company was thereafter to give him employment during his natural life at a compensation of $60 per month, and that he employed the defendants as his attorneys to compel by suit said company to keep said contract, alleging that it had discharged him without cause, and failed and refused to give him employment; that thereafter the defendants, as attorneys at law, brought suit upon such contract in a justice court for the recovery of one month’s pay, then due him if the contract had been kept, and that he recovered judgment therein for said period, from which said judgment the defendant company appealed to the circuit court of Jackson county, where the company dismissed its appeal, leaving the judgment of the justice court in force, and which judgment the defendant company afterwards paid off and satisfied; that during the pendency of said appeal the defendants, as his attorneys, brought another suit in the circuit court of Jackson county, Mo., on said contract against said company for the recovery of the monthly payments which had accrued between the time covered by the former suit and the institution of said second suit. To this last action the defendant company appeared and demurred on two stated grounds: First, that the petition did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action; • and, second, because of the pendency of another suit between the same parties respecting the same cause of action. This demurrer was sustained, but whether the action of the court was based upon one or the other or upon both of the alleged grounds in the demurrer neither the record nor the evidence in this case discloses. Thereupon the plaintiff took leave to file an amended petition, and, being a nonresident of the state, he was required, by order of the court, to give security for costs. By reason of his failure to give such security, that suit was dismissed by the circuit court. Thereupon the connection of the defendants with the case ceased, and the plaintiff, upon the recommendation of one of the defendants’ firm, employed another lawyer in the state of Kansas to institute another suit over there, with which proceeding the defendants had nothing to do.

It is contended by plaintiff that he lost his right of action to recover any further sum from the defendant telephone company for the reason that the contract was indivisible, and that the cause of action thereon could not be split up, and that, when a recovery was had for the one month’s pay, it was a bar to any further action; and that this resulted from the negligence and ignorance of the law on the part of the defendants. The petition in this case specially pleads that this principle of law had been announced by the supreme court of the state in the case of Booge v. Railroad Co., 33 Mo. 212, 82 Am. Dec. 160. The facts in that case were that the defendant employed the plaintiff in March, 1858, as a runner or solicitor for freight and passengers from that time until the close of navigation on the Missouri river at [818]*818the price of $125 per month, payable monthly; that the plaintiff entered upon such service, and continued therein until the 19th day of June, 1858, when the defendant wrongfully discharged him, and refused to permit him to perform said contract, notwithstanding his willingness and readiness to do so. The petition further alleged that navigation on said river did not close until December, 1858, and alleged that there was due for his wages under said contract for the months of September, October, and November, $375. The evidence disclosed that the plaintiff had hitherto instituted in the same court an action against the defendant on said contract for breach thereof, and obtained judgment therein for the sum of $250, for wages for the period between the 1st of July and the 1st of .September, 1858. The court held that the contract was a unit, and that the plaintiff might have recovered in one suit for the whole term of his contract, and that, having elected to sue for the shorter term, it was a bar to the second action. The action in this case is based upon the theory that the plaintiff had a contract with said telephone company to pay him at the rate of $60 per month during his lifetime, or as long as he was able and willing to work. The question to be decided here is, what was the statement made by the plaintiff of his cause of action to the defendants at the time of their employment as counsel, in order to determine whether or not they were culpable of such negligence and ignorance as to place upon them, as attorneys at law, a liability for mismanagement and misdirection of their client’s case ? In other words, was the case presented by the plaintiff to his attorneys of such character as to leave no reasonable doubt in their minds, as intelligent lawyers, as to whether or not he had a contract that was to run during his life, or for other certain definite period, to bring his case within the rule of the decision above mentioned ? A reference to the plaintiff’s testimony in this case will show that he had no such contract with said company. After his alleged injury, and in settlement thereof, the following instrument of writing was executed between the parties:

“Kansas City, Mo., Nov. 3rd, 1894.
“Missouri & Kansas Telephone Co., to Charles Eberhardt and Wife, Dr.
“1894. Kansas City, Mo.
“Voucher No. 8.
“In full of all claims by us or either of us, on account of damages or injury to the person of Charles Eberhardt, arising from the accidental falling of a ladder on or about the 19th day of August, 1892, at or near the premises known as the baggage room of the Union Depot Company in the city of Kansas City, Missouri. Said ladder having been borrowed and placed in position by said Eberhardt to enable him to take down some old wire which in his judgment was necessary to be done......................... $150 00
“Examined by executive committee, and approved for $100.00.
“Correct. W. W. Smith, Superintendent.
“Examined and found correct. W. H. Ballard, Auditor.
“Approved. A. Burt, General Manager.
“Notice. The person signing this voucher is notified to see that payment is received before or at the time of signing. If this voucher is signed without payment, it is done at the signer’s own risk, and the company will not be responsible for any claim for damages thereafter.
“Keeeived of the Missouri & Kansas Telephone Company, subject to the above notice, $150.00 in full of the above account.
“Charles Eberhardt.
“Mrs. Maggie Eberhardt, His Wife.
“Kansas City, Missouri, Nov.

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Related

Priest v. Deaver
22 Mo. App. 276 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1886)
Booge v. Pacific Railroad
33 Mo. 212 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1862)
Arthur v. Rickards
48 Mo. 298 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1871)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
115 F. 816, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 4974, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eberhardt-v-harkless-circtwdmo-1902.