Evans v. Evans

93 S.W. 969, 196 Mo. 1, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 188
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 20, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 93 S.W. 969 (Evans v. Evans) 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
Evans v. Evans, 93 S.W. 969, 196 Mo. 1, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 188 (Mo. 1906).

Opinion

LAMM, J.

On the 23d of October, 1899, Thomas D. Evans, then childless, died a resident of Cass county, Missouri, full of years and infirmities of mind and body, having shortly theretofore conveyed a considerable estate to his wife. By inference, he was a Welshman — at any rate, he left surviving him a brother, [8]*8D. J. Evans (appellant here), and a sister, Mary Thomas, residents of Wales, and two nephews, Daniel and Charles William Evans (respondents here), sons of a deceased brother, residents of the city of New York. Daniel Evans was thirty-one years of age and married; Charles William was twenty-nine years of age and single, and they are spoken of both as chefs and as waiters, bnt the substantial evidence points to their business occupation as that of cafe waiters.

In November, 1899, D. J. Evans left Wales and came to Cass county to investigate his deceased brother’s affairs. Up to that time he never had seen his nephews, Charles William and Daniel, except once in Paris, and had held no communication with them whatever, and while an extensive correspondence occurred subsequently, yet he never met them but once during its existence. We infer his American trip was the result' of consultation with his sister, Mary Thomas.. On his coming upon the ground, such a situation presented itself as led him to solicit and procure a power of attorney from his said nephews and sister to represent them as heirs at law of Thomas D. Evans in and about obtaining their rights as such. The terms of this power of attorney are not shown, but the matter is dealt with throughout as though it was a full power of attorney and vested him with large discretion. In pursuance of such power, and acting for himself and his principals therein, he'utilized the information already gathered by him tending to show undue influence and mental incapacity, and other knowledge aftérwards obtained, in challeging the validity of the conveyance made by his brother to his wife and thereby, with the assistance of attorneys in Kansas City and Harrisonville, he obtained a settlement with the widow out of court, whereby a tract of land in Texas, several farms in Cass ’ county, and 85 shares of the capital stock of the Harrisonville Hotel Company of Harrisonville, Missouri, were transferred to him, together with $1,000 in cash, [9]*9about the middle of January, 1900, in full acquittance of the claims presented and represented by him. . The hotel corporation aforesaid was capitalized at $38,000, divided into shares of stock of the par value of $100 each, but of an inconsiderable and uncertain actual value.

Being an alien, it seems a question was sprung about his right to take and hold title to real estate, and thereupon the title was put in one Davis, and by Davis it was transferred to the Fidelity Trust Company, a Missouri corporation (also a respondent here) in trust.

Mary Thomas had a son, William, residing in Cass county or in Kansas City, and it shortly befell that friction arose between William Thomas and his uncle about the management of the estate, and they began to eye each other with distrust, but the merits of this particular family controversy do not appear material to the present litigation, further than to say that while full details are not in the record, yet it is apparent that William Thomas put himself in communication directly and indirectly, through his attorneys in Kansas City, with Daniel and Charles William Evans and with his mother in Wales, and that it presently resulted that Mary Thomas placed the management of her interests in her son William’s hands or in the hands of attorneys in Kansas City, and D. J. Evans ceased to represent his sister as attorney in fact. The exact date D. J. Evans ceased to act as agent for Mary Thomas does not appear, but it was some time during the year 1900, and possibly during the summer or autumn.

During the time he was clothed with full power as agent, he made disbursements in repairs, taxes, attorneys ’ fees, for abstracts and personal expenses in a. large aggregate sum and incurred other outlays in advertising and in attempting to sell the property recovered by him from the widow of Thomas D. Evans— the policy of all parties getting this windfall being to [10]*10close their shares out for cash as speedily as might he. The market value for real estate was dull during 1900 and it seems that he was able to dispose of only the Texas tract, of small extent and value, and another small tract for a small sum. When things were in this fix and after his right to manage the estate on the part of. his sister Mary had been taken from him, he found that through the instigation and at the initiative of William Thomas a partition suit was about to be instituted to partition the estate held by the Fidelity Trust Company in trust for himself, Mary Thomas and his two nephews. Thereupon he, se defendendo, employed a firm of attorneys in Kansas City to institute a partition suit in the circuit court of Cass county on his Own behalf, which was done to the January term, 1901, making Mary Thomas and his two nephews and the Fidelity Trust Company defendants.

• Pending this partition suit, and evidently against his wish, his nephews, acting through their attorneys in New York, employed one of the same attorneys to represent them that Mary Thomas had employed. It seems one of the Kansas City counsel for Mary Thomas had apparently assumed a position somewhat antagonistic to 1). J. Evans and it seems that his employment took on a bit of color from that antagonism. At all events, he required a free hand and unquestioned authority as a militant lawyer in a militant case and exacted and received a written power of attorney to represent Daniel and Charles William Evans, as follows:

“We hereby retain you as our attorney and conn-' sel in the above-entitled case, and authorize you to appear for us and each of us therein to file answer for us and take such steps and proceedings as in your judgment may seem proper to protect our interests in the above case until it is finally disposed of.
“Daniel Evans,
‘ ‘ Charles William Evans. ’ ’

[11]*11Thereafter counsel entered the appearance of their clients and filed a joint answer for Mary Thomas and Daniel and Charles William Evans during the May term, 1901. It is somewhat significant that this answer challenges the business management by D. J. Evans of the estate of his principals, alleges that he had collected and had on hand over $6,000 which he should disgorge, and asks his accounts to be examined and two-thirds of that sum charged against his individual interest for the benefit of his cotenants. Thereafter at the September term, 1901, of said circuit court, ,D. J. Evans filed a reply, setting forth matter justifying, if true, his acts and management .under his power of attorney, and, furthermore, made an exhibition of his disbursements for and on behalf of the trust estate and pursuant to the powers given him in his warrant of attorney, together with claims for his personal services and expenditures ■ in recovering, bettering, managing and trying to dispose of the estate, aggregating over $7,500.

Also pending this litigation, D. J. Evans made a proposal to buy the interest of his nephews for $2,000, and we think this offer was made shortly before the aforesaid answer was filed. This proposal was submitted by them to their New York attorneys and by said New York attorneys to their attorneys in Kansas City for investigation and report, and D. J. Evans was notified of that fact.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 S.W. 969, 196 Mo. 1, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-evans-mo-1906.