Grimm v. Barrington

84 S.W. 357, 109 Mo. App. 35, 1904 Mo. App. LEXIS 109
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 27, 1904
StatusPublished

This text of 84 S.W. 357 (Grimm v. Barrington) 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
Grimm v. Barrington, 84 S.W. 357, 109 Mo. App. 35, 1904 Mo. App. LEXIS 109 (Mo. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

On July 5, 1898, appellant commenced Ms suit by attachment, in the St. Louis circuit court, against William F. Ryan, and on July 6, 1898, had respondent duly served as garnishee. The attachment was sustained and judgment was rendered in appellant’s favor, on February 25, 1901, against Ryan for $305.40. On October 4, 1898, interrogatories to the respondent were filed to which she filed answer denying any indebtedness to Ryan. An amended denial and a reply thereto were subsequently filed. The facts, as developed at the trial on the issues as made by the amended denial of appellant and the reply thereto filed by respondent, are substantially as follows :

In 1898, the respondent held some policies of insurance on the life of her husband, who had recently died. One of these, for $5,000, had been issued by the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company of New Jersey. In May, 1898, Ryan called on respondent at her home in St. Joseph, Missouri, and represented himself as an insurance expert having offices at Kansas City and St. Louis, and induced the respondent to employ Mm to collect her insurance policies, assuring her that he would employ the services of appellant as attorney to assist him, and induce her to deliver the policy of the New Jersey Insurance Company to him and to sign and deliver to him the following contract:

“St. Joseph, Missouri, May 24,1898.
“In consideration of services to be rendered by William F. Ryan, in securing payment to me of any and all sums due me by any and all insurance companies, I agree to pay him one-third or thirty-three and one-third per cent of all amounts recovered by him for me, or recovered by me through Ms assistance.
[39]*39“It is -understood and agreed that 1 am to incur no expense whatever except the one-third, as above stated.
“Mrs. Almedia Barrington.”

Ryan took this policy to St. Louis and delivered it to the appellant, exhibited to him the contract he had procured from Mrs. Barrington, and engaged his professional services, to aid in the collection of the policy. Appellant was entirely ignorant of the representations made by Ryan to Mrs. Barrington to procure the contract, and in good faith rendered services looking to the collection of the policy. For these services the judgment in his favor for $305.40 was rendered.

It does not appear that the insurance company contested the payment of the policy. It furnished Mrs. Barrington blank proofs of loss, after which her son came to St. Louis and, under pretense of wanting to see the policy, got possession of it and retained it. Mrs. Barrington notified Ryan that she repudiated the contract of May 24th and on September 7, 1898, began suit against Ryan in the St. Louis circuit court to set aside the contract, on the ground that it had been obtained by deceit and false and fraudulent representations.. Ryan in his answer, among other things, set up that he had rendered services under the contract. The cause was tried in the circuit court on June 25, 1899, and resulted in a judgment for Mrs. Barrington, setting aside the contract on the ground alleged in the petition. The judgment also, in pursuance of an allegation and prayer in the petition, restrained Ryan perpetually from making further use of the contract, and from instituting and prosecuting, or continuing the prosecution of any suit on the contract against Mrs. Barrington. Ryan appealed from this judgment to this court, where on March 26, 1901, the judgment was affirmed. Barring-ton v. Ryan, 88 Mo. App. 85.

On July 5,1898, Ryan began his suit of attachment against Mrs. Barrington, in Essex county, New Jersey, [40]*40and had the Mntnal Benefit Life Insurance Company summoned as garnishee. The second count of his declaration (on which the cause was tried) is as follows:

“And for further count the said plaintiff says that the said defendant was indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of three thousand dollars for work and labor done and performed by the plaintiff for the defendant at her request, and in the sum of three thousand dollars for money paid by the plaintiff for the use of 'the defendant at her request, and in the sum of three thousand dollars for interest on moneys forborne by the defendant to the plaintiff at her request, and being so indebted the defendant promised the plaintiff to pay him the said several sums of three thousand dollars when she should be thereunto afterwards requested, and although often requested the defendant has neglected and refused and still does neglect and refuse to pay the plaintiff the said several sums of three thousand dollars, or any part thereof, to his damage of three thousand dollars.”

The averments of this count were put in issue by appropriate pleas.

On August 16, 1901, the cause was tried in the New Jersey court resulting in a judgment in Ryan’s favor for $1,000. No appeal was taken by Mrs. Barrington, and on February 26, 1902, the insurance company paid the judgment and costs, aggregating $1,076.82, a scire facias having been issued against it for this amount, but it appears no formal judgment was entered against the insurance company as garnishee.

The first count of Ryan’s declaration filed in the New Jersey court, counted on the contract of May 24, 1898. One of Mrs. Barrington’s pleas to this count was the judgment of the circuit court of St. Louis setting aside the contract and enjoining the prosecution of any suit thereon. Ryan, before going to trial, entered a nolle prosequi as to this count. Ryan testified as a wit[41]*41ness for appellant. He swore that in his testimony before the New Jersey court he stated that his services were exclusive of the contract of May 24, 1898,. and were rendered on a different contract or understanding in respect to this particular policy, and that the Mutual Benefit Insurance Company’s policy had been allowed in full before any steps were taken in regard to the cancellation of the contract; that his testimony was confined to that one policy and' that his services had been rendered prior to any notice from Mrs. Barring-ton that she had repudiated the contract, and that the sole question was as to the value of his services rendered before notice of the repudiation; ’that he had received the amount of the judgment through his attorney, but had not paid Mr. Grimm anything, nor had he paid any of the costs. "We quote from his testimony in the present case:

Q. Let me understand you. I understood you a moment ago to state that you didn’t testify that she was indebted to you on account of services you had rendered on account of this contract of May 24, T898, with reference to this policy in the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Association, but with reference to services in regard to another policy? A. Under the instruction of the judge the policy of the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company was the one to which the testimony was confined, and that was the only one I testified about.
“Q. You testified the services had been rendered in regard to that policy before you were notified by Mrs. Barrington that she cancelled the contract you claimed to have with, her? A. Absolutely.
“Q. That is the only matter? A. That was the only matter I tried.
“Q. Whether you were entitled to any compensation for services rendered? A. Yes, sir; before the cancellation of my contract.
“Q.

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Bluebook (online)
84 S.W. 357, 109 Mo. App. 35, 1904 Mo. App. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grimm-v-barrington-moctapp-1904.