Fisher v. Myers

100 S.W.2d 551, 339 Mo. 1196, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 455
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 14, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 100 S.W.2d 551 (Fisher v. Myers) 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
Fisher v. Myers, 100 S.W.2d 551, 339 Mo. 1196, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 455 (Mo. 1936).

Opinions

This action for libel was commenced and tried in the Circuit Court of Jackson County, at Independence. Josephine Myers, Okie Myers, John W. Truesdale, John P. Austin, W.W. *Page 1199 Grow, C.L. Stange, John H. McGuire and Edith E. Ambruster, were made defendants. The verdict of the jury was against all the defendants for $50,000 actual and $75,000 punitive damages. The defendants filed separate motions for a new trial; the motion of defendant Ambruster was sustained and the other motions overruled. Whereupon the plaintiff dismissed as to defendant Ambruster and from the judgment entered against them in the aggregate amount of $125,000, in accordance with the verdict, the other defendants have appealed.

Eleven days were consumed in the trial of this case; the record is voluminous and it is with misgiving the writer undertakes to state even in general outline the facts developed by the testimony of the large number of witnesses. However appellant's assignments of error on this appeal necessitate such a statement. The plaintiff, Mrs. Josephine S. Fisher was fifty-six years of age at the time she commenced this action. Plaintiff and R.E. Fisher were married at Kansas City, Missouri, in October, 1903, and since have continuously resided together in that city as husband and wife. In 1905 the Fishers purchased "a little cottage on Montgall" in Kansas City where they made their home until 1910 when they purchased a residence on East Fifty-ninth Street where they have since resided. No children were born of the marriage. About March, 1907, Mrs. Fisher organized classes in vocal music at Sweet Springs, in Saline County, and Aullville, Lafayette County, Missouri. The members of the vocal classes were of both sexes and of various ages, "both men and women, young folks, girls and boys." The class at Sweet Springs had "somewhere between 15 and 20" members; that at Aullville eight or ten. Mrs. Fisher met the Sweet Springs class at the home of Mrs. Willis Smith and the Aullville class at the home of Mode Anson. Each week she would leave Kansas City on Thursday via of the "Lexington Branch" of the Missouri Pacific Railroad and "if the train was on time I would stop at Aullville and give my class at Aullville Thursday night and go up to Sweet Springs the next morning, Friday" (on the Lexington Branch). She would "teach at Sweet Springs all day and Friday evening" and return to Kansas City on the "Saturday morning" train. However, if the train was late on Thursday (as her testimony indicates was a frequent occurrence) she would not stop at Aullville for the Thursday night classes but continue to Sweet Springs meet her class there on Friday and Friday evening and "come back to Aullville on the Saturday morning train and give my classes there" on Saturday. She accepted frequent invitations to remain over and sing on Sunday in the churches at Sweet Springs. When returning to Kansas City on the afternoon or evening train of the Lexington Branch she would, when she leared from the trainmen that a train with which the Lexington *Page 1200 Branch made connection at Myrick was late, get off the Lexington Branch train at Higginsville and take a Chicago Alton train to Kansas City and she frequently made this change at Higginsville. If, on such occasions, she had time she ate dinner at the Arcade Hotel, at Higginsville, which was across the street from the Chicago Alton depot. It was her custom at such times to wait in the lobby of the Arcade Hotel for the Chicago Alton train. Mrs. Fisher continued to teach these classes throughout 1907 and in 1908. Both Mr. and Mrs. Fisher testify positively that she made her last trip and met the Sweet Springs and Aullville classes the last time in August, 1908; that on that trip she gave up the classes; that she left Kansas City on Thursday, August 27; that the following day was her thirty-fifth birthday and Mr. Fisher went to the depot with her and as she was getting on the train gave her a "leather dressing case" with her "name on it" and the year 1908 "in gold letters" as a birthday gift; that she decided to quit her classes at Sweet Springs and Aullville because the railroad fare had been greatly increased and she had failed to get a class at Slater, Missouri, which would have made it profitable for her to continue her classes at Sweet Springs and Aullville in conjunction with the proposed Slater class; that it was understood when she left Kansas City on Thursday, August 27, that Mr. Fisher would meet her at Higginsville on Sunday morning August 30 (1908); that Mr. Fisher, who was at that time secretary of the Brotherhood of Railway Mail Clerks left Kansas City for St. Louis Thursday night, in connection with business of the organization; that Mrs. Fisher having completed her work at Sweet Springs and Aullville came to Higginsville "on the evening train" Saturday (August 29), registered at the Arcade Hotel and spent the night there; that Mr. Fisher took a Chicago Alton train out of St. Louis Saturday night and arrived in Higginsville at "six or seven o'clock" Sunday morning, August 30 (1908); and that he went to his wife's room, awakened her and ate breakfast at the hotel and took the next train for Kansas City. Mrs. Fisher says she never thereafter returned to Sweet Springs or Aullville with the exception that "sometime in November, 1908," Mr. Fisher's father, who resided on a farm "about 4½ miles" from Sweet Springs, being ill she went there with Mr. Fisher to visit his father. Mr. Fisher stated that he was never in Higginsville after August 30, 1908, when he met his wife there as he returned from St. Louis. Mrs. Fisher testified that the only time she ever occupied a room or spent a night at the Arcade Hotel in Higginsville was the night of August 29, 1908, under the circumstances above stated, and that she was never in Higginsville after that time.

Mrs. Fisher had become a member of one of the Kansas City chapters of the Order of the Eastern Star in 1906. After 1908 Mrs. Fisher became very interested and active in the work of the Order. *Page 1201 She served in various offices in the Kansas City chapters of which she was a member and became and served as the first Worthy Matron of Park Chapter in 1912 and 1913. From and after 1912 she regularly attended the annual meeting of the Grand Chapter of Missouri held annually in October. She served on various committees of the Grand Chapter prior to 1918 and in that year was appointed Grand Warden of the Grand Chapter. During the ensuing years she served in the various offices "in the line" until she became Associate Grand Matron for the term from October, 1921, to October, 1922, and at the meeting of the Grand Chapter in October, 1922, she was elected Worthy Grand Matron. At the expiration of her term in that office, and at the meeting of the Grand Chapter, in October, 1923, she was elected a member of the Advisory Board of the Masonic Home for a term of three years. The Eastern Star has three members on this board. Defendant Ambruster had been elected to this Advisory Board in 1920 and that term expired in 1923. Mrs. Ambruster was thus defeated in 1923 for re-election by Mrs. Fisher who was reelected to the board for another three-year term in 1926. After her service as Grand Matron, Mrs. Fisher served three terms as a member of the Jurisprudence Committee of the Grand Chapter. She was active and influential within the organization and seems to have been a recognized authority on Eastern Star law and procedure. She conducted classes on "parlimentary law" and training classes for Associate Matrons in Kansas City. For seventeen years she was president of the "Parlimentary Club" of Kansas City.

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Bluebook (online)
100 S.W.2d 551, 339 Mo. 1196, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fisher-v-myers-mo-1936.