Estate of Thomasson v. Boatmen's National Bank

144 S.W.2d 79, 346 Mo. 911, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 578
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 31, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 144 S.W.2d 79 (Estate of Thomasson v. Boatmen's National Bank) 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
Estate of Thomasson v. Boatmen's National Bank, 144 S.W.2d 79, 346 Mo. 911, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 578 (Mo. 1940).

Opinion

*914 HAYS, P. J.

The respondent filed in the Probate Court of the City of St. Louis a demand against the estate of Hugh W. Thomasson, deceased. The case was certified to the circuit court under Section 2053, R. S. Mo. 1929, where the validity of the claim was contested by the present appellant, the executor of said estate. A jury trial in the circuit court resulted in a verdict and judgment for the claimant in the amount of $35,000, from which an appeal was allowed to this court.

Respondent, a duly licensed attorney at law, has practiced his profession in St. Louis for many years. The present claim is for legal services alleged to have been rendered by him for Thomasson. Mr. Thomasson was at the time of his death in 1933 some 76 years of age. He was a man of feeble intellect, having suffered for sometime from senile dementia. At the time of his death he was possessed of an estate whose gross value was estimated at about $750,000. Repondent first represented him in 1923 by filing a damage suit against the City of St. Louis arising from an abortive attempt of the city to condemn certain Thomasso^i properties. Owing, so respondent says, to Thomas-son’s mental condition, this suit was never brought to trial, but at the time of the hearing of the present case was still pending on the circuit court docket. In respondent’s demand only an insignificant portion of the total fee asked is allocated to this litigation. Practically all of the fee asked is in connection with litigation against one Grace Allen, also sometimes known as Caroline Mahood and as Grace Thomas-son and by divers other names. (For convenience we shall refer to her as Grace Allen.) The Thomasson-Allen matters, in so far as respondent was connected therewith, started in the year 1930 and his connection with these.matters terminated August 15, 1931.

Respondent’s demand originally was for an attorney’s fee of $75,250 and expense money of $7,337.58, as against which he admitted a credit for payments received of $9,171. He afterwards voluntarily reduced this claim by $10,000, making the balance prayed for $63,416.58.

During the trial below the appellant moved for á directed verdict at the close of the claimant’s case and again at the close of all of the evidence, and it here assigns as error the trial court’s refusal of these motions. Before considering the record pertaining to this assignment, we will notice a contention of respondent in connection therewith. At the close of all of the evidence, after the trial court had refused the directed verdict for the defendant, the claimant asked and the court at his request gave instructions submitting the case on claimant’s theory. To the giving of these instructions appellant failed to except. Appellant then asked and was given instructions submitting its theory of defense. Did it thereby, as contended by respondent, waive the right to challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to make a submissible case ? Our latest decisions have held that it did not, and this is now the established general rule of our court. [Lew *915 ellen v. Haynie, 287 S. W. 634; Elkin v. St. Louis Public Service Co., 335 Mo. 951, 74 S. W. (2d) 600; Ambruster v. Levitt Realty Co., 341 Mo. 364, 107 S. W. (2d) 74; Philibert v. Benjamin Ansehl Co., 342 Mo. 1239, 119 S. W. (2d) 797.]

The cases of Davison v. Hines, 246 S. W. 295 and Merrielees v. Wabash R. Co., 163 Mo. 470, 63 S. W. 718, cited by respondent, and also the ease of Torrance v. Pryor, 210 S. W. 430, contain certain broad statements which appear to support the respondent’s position in this regard. However, in so far as they take the ground that the act of a defendant in requesting instructions submitting his theory of. defense necessarily' and in all cases waives the question of the sufficiency of a plaintiff’s evidence as raised by requested peremptory instructions, these cases were overruled by our later decisions above cited. Hence we rule the point against the respondent.

We fully recognize the rule to which attention was called in oral argument and in respondent’s brief that in passing upon a demurrer to the evidence ordinarily we must accept as true all of the facts shown in the record favorable to the plaintiff who was successful below and must disregard evidence favorable to the defendant whenever it is in conflict with that favorable to plaintiff. We must also draw from the evidence all reasonable inferences in support of the claimant’s theory. [Rexford v. Philippi, 337 Mo. 389, 84 S. W. (2d) 628; Becker v. Aschen, 131 S. W. (2d) 533; State ex rel. Highway Commission v. Hoffmann, 132 S. W. (2d) 27.]

But, on the other hand, where the claimant has expressly and deliberately admitted certain facts in his pleadings or in his testimony, we are, of course, justified in accepting such facts as true. If such admissions should definitely establish a complete defense to the claim, the duty of the trial court to direct a verdict would be plain.

Respondent correctly states that a demand filed in a probate court is not to be judged by the strict rules of pleading applied to a petition in the‘circuit court. Such a demand is sufficient if it gives reasonable notice to the adverse party of the nature and extent of the claim made, and if it be specific enough so that a ruling thereon will become res judicata of the matters involved. [Rassieur v. Zimmer, 249 Mo. 175, 155 S. W. 24; Liebaart v. Hoehle’s Estate, 111 S. W. (2d) 925.] Yet, regardless of whether or not the demand considered as a pleading be sufficient, the facts stated therein which are unfavorable to the claimant stand as a solemn judicial admission, the truth of which, in the absence of some showing of innocent mistake on the part of the pleader, ought to be taken as established. Particularly is this true when the claimant himself is a lawyer and would, therefore, have every opportunity to know what he stated in his pleading and the legal effect of the allegations so made. So we look to the allegations of the claim to see whether or not it contains admissions against the interest of the claimant which must be considered along with the testimony *916 in the case as bearing upon the question of whether or not he was entitled to go to the jury.

The evidence disclosed that in 1930 said Grace Allen, a notorious adventuress, met Thomasson at the Fairmount Hotel where he then resided and conceived a plan to possess herself of a large part of his estate. She induced him to take a trip with her to Waterloo, Illinois, where through fraudulent representations she induced him to sign an application for a marriage license. It seems clear that Thomasson did not know the nature of the document he signed. A ceremony was then performed by a justice of the peace. Subsequently Grace Allen, evidently dubious as to the validity of this- marriage, had a second ceremony performed. Thomasson was totally unaware of what was going on. When he returned to St. Louis she informed him that she was his wife and demanded the payment of money.

Soon after these demands were made and within a few days after the first purported marriage, Thomasson consulted respondent who, at his request, inserted advertisements in the newspapers to the effect that Thomasson would not be responsible for debts created by Grace Allen. Respondent then hired detectives to investigate this woman’s antecedents and the facts of the purported marriage.

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Bluebook (online)
144 S.W.2d 79, 346 Mo. 911, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-thomasson-v-boatmens-national-bank-mo-1940.