Gabbert v. Evans

166 S.W. 635, 184 Mo. App. 283, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 553
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 12, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 166 S.W. 635 (Gabbert v. Evans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gabbert v. Evans, 166 S.W. 635, 184 Mo. App. 283, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 553 (Mo. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

STURGIS, J.

In this case the defendant is resisting the payment of an attorney fee and personal expenses, alleged to be due to plaintiffs, a firm of St. Joseph lawyers, in defending a suit originating in the probate court of Atchison county, Missouri. The plaintiffs claim that defendant, who was executrix of the estate of W. W. Hudgens, deceased, employed them to defend a claim for $2000; presented against said estate by J. W. Young, agreeing to pay plaintiffs a fee of $500 and the necessary personal expenses of plaintiffs in attending court, etc., in connection therewith. The answer sets up that defendant did not contract personally with plaintiffs but only on behalf of the ITudgens estate, in her capacity as executrix; that such fee was by the contract to be contingent on plaintiffs ’ success in defending against said claim; and that plaintiffs were negligent in defending against said claim and did not use that professional knowledge and skill which they as attorneys were required to use in conducting such defense, resulting in losing the case and having the claim allowed against the estate for $1500 on appeal and trial in the circuit court, and in compromise of which defendant, as executrix, was compelled to pay $900. The amount of plaintiffs’ fee is not in dispute.

After the evidence was all in," the court submitted the case to the jury on the issues of whether the employment of plaintiffs was contingent or absolute and whether by defendant individually or as executrix on behalf of the estate. The evidence on these points was conflicting and the jury found for plaintiffs in the sum of $501 on instructions free from error and of which [289]*289defendant makes no serious complaint. There is only one point in connection with these defenses that needs mention which is that, as plaintiffs’ employment was in behalf of the estate, it is contended that any promise by defendant to pay same personally is an agreement within the Statute of Frauds and must be in writing under the first clause of section 2783, Revised Statutes 1909. This promise, however, as thus resolved by the jury, is not a promise by an executor to answer for an existing or previously incurred debt of the estate but is an original promise by the defendant, who, it is shown, was the sole beneficiary of the estate; and such agreement is not within the statute. [George & Lowe v. Williams, 58 Mo. App. 138, 140; Steele v. Order of Pyramids, 125 Mo. App. 680, 682, 103 S. W. 108.]

The trial court instructed the jury that there was no sufficient evidence to constitute a defense 'on the ground of negligence of plaintiffs in the performance of their duties as attorneys in defending the case in which they were employed. After the return of the verdict for plaintiffs on the issues submitted, the trial court sustained defendant’s motion for new trial, specifying as the reason for so doing that the court erred in withdrawing the defense of negligence from the jury and refusing to give instructions relating to such defense. It is from this order that plaintiffs have appealed.

The defendant invokes the doctrine that this court, in determining whether the trial court properly granted a new trial, is not confined to the ground or grounds specified by the court for so doing but must inquire into all the grounds mentioned in the motion therefor and sustain the cqurt’s action if any such grounds are found sufficient. [Barr v. Hays, 172 Mo. App. 591, 599, 155 S. W. 1095, and the cases there -cited.] It is suggested that the motion for new trial ought to be [290]*290sustained on the ground that the verdict is against the weight of the evidence on the issues submitted to the jury; and, since appellate courts rarely interfere with the discretion reposed in trial courts in determining the weight of the evidence on such motions, we should not do so here. This assumes that the trial court did weigh the evidence and exercise its discretion, while there is nothing in this record to indicate that it did so. This court does not set aside verdicts as against the weight of the evidence and, in the absence of some showing that the trial court did so, we cannot assume that it did. [Richter v. Railroad, 145 Mo. App. 1, 6, 129 S. W. 1055; Barr v. Hays, 172 Mo. App. 591, 601, 155 S. W. 1095; Roney v. Organ, 176 Mo. App. 234, 161 S. W. 868, 869.] Moreover, where a party relies on some valid ground for sustaining the motion other than that specified by the court, he must discover and point out such ground and that has not been done here. [Crawford v. Stock Yards Co., 215 Mo. 394, 402, 114 S. W. 1057; Roney v. Organ, supra.] It follows, therefore, that if the action of the trial court in granting the new trial is to be sustained at all, it must be on the ground set forth in the record, to-wit, in withdrawing the question of plaintiffs’ negligence from the jury and not submitting the same on instructions asked by defendant.

There are several acts of negligence or want of professional skill specified in the answer and hinted at in defendant’s evidence. The case of Young v. Estate of Hudgens, in the defense of which plaintiffs were employed, was tried in the probate court of Atchison county and again on appeal in the circuit court. Defendant claims that plaintiffs were negligent in not putting in evidence then at hand on the trial in the probate court, but, instead, rested the case on the evidence introduced by claimant. As to whether a defendant should introduce evidence on his behalf or submit the case on the weakness of plaintiff’s evidence is one [291]*291depending largely on sound judgment applied to the particular facts and is often difficult of solution. Without knowing all the facts and the whole situation as it presented itself to plaintiffs as attorneys for the estate, no person, much less an average juror, could say whether or not a failure to introduce such evidence showed negligence or want of professional skill. Such facts and situation were not before the jury nor are they in this record. When the case was tried in the circuit court, it would seem that plaintiffs yielded to defendant’s insistence that the evidence on their side be introduced and it was introduced with the result that a verdict larger by $500 than that in the probate court was rendered there. This would indicate that plaintiffs’ judgment was sound in this matter. '

However that may be, we are relieved of considering any matter tending to show negligence or want of professional skill of plaintiffs in the conduct of that suit, other than the one matter of failing to file a sufficient affidavit for appeal from the judgment for $1500, rendered against the estate in the circuit court. During the progress of the trial of the present case, defendant, by her attorney (which by the way she might think was negligence on his part) distinctly informed the court that the only negligence complained of was the failure to perfect the appeal. Thereafter, the case proceeded on that theory and it needs no citation of authorities to show that defendant must be held to the same theory here.

Attending to this point, the evidence is that plaintiffs, without any particular instructions from defendant as to appealing the case of Young v. Estate of Hudgens from the circuit court to the Kansas City Court of Appeals, prepared and filed for that purpose the following affidavit for appeal: ‘ ‘ State of Missouri, County of Buchanan, ss. Comes now Lewis C. G-abbert, the agent of the above-named. Ala Evans, the executrix of the above-named estate, and for and on behalf of [292]

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Bluebook (online)
166 S.W. 635, 184 Mo. App. 283, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gabbert-v-evans-moctapp-1914.