Hallen v. Smith

264 S.W. 665, 305 Mo. 157, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 695
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 31, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 264 S.W. 665 (Hallen v. Smith) 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
Hallen v. Smith, 264 S.W. 665, 305 Mo. 157, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 695 (Mo. 1924).

Opinion

*161 GRAVES, J.

These are cross-appeals and were argued and submitted together. Pleadings and facts can well be commingled in a short outline of the case. Plaintiff had, for more than a year prior to the incidents involved in this action, been a stenographer and notary public in the real estate brokerage office of one M. Dwight Fortner. A few days before the happenings which gave rise to the instant suit Fortner left for parts unknown, but was later located in Paris, France, and brought back to Missouri, and served a term in our penitentiary. The day Fortner left (ostensibly for Chicago, but in fact for New Orleans) he gave plaintiff a check for $500 on the St. Louis Union Trust Company, with directions to cash it and pay some bills. This the plaintiff did upon the next day, and after paying the bills, gave the remainder of the money to Fortner’s wife. Just prior to his departure Fortner had been trying to *162 effect a sale of some apartments owned by Henry C. Tnlley, to F. A. Steer. Mr. Steer had procured from the Third National Bank of St. Louis a cashier’s check for $12,000, to be used in the purchase of the apartments. This check was payable to P. A. Steer, and Mr. Steer had endorsed it over to Henry C. Tulley, and thus indorsed turned it over to Portner. The plaintiff had seen this check, and knew of the attempted real estate deal. Tulley declined to receive the cheek, being unwilling to accept Steer’s proposed price. Pour or five days after Fortner’s disappearance it was discovered that someone (presumably Portner) had forged the name of Tulley to an indorsement upon this check, and it was deposited to Fortner’s credit in the St. Louis Union Trust Company. It is claimed that Portner had tried to get Tulley to indorse the check in order (as he said) to get Steer’s money back from the Third National Bank, but Tulley declined to indorse it. "When it was discovered that the indorsement had been forged, or was thought to have been forged, Mr. A. C. Stewart was counsel for the Trust Company and also President of the Board of Police Commissioners in the City of St. Louis. The matter was brought to the attention of the chief of police by the Trust Company. The investigation of the matter was assigned to defendant Smith, the then chief of detectives of St. Louis. During the investigations Smith consulted with Stewart, and the investigations resulted in the discovery of other supposed forgeries by Portner. Plaintiff, as notary public, had taken and attached certificates of acknowledgments to instruments, wherein it was said that the persons denied that they had ever appeared before her, or given such acknowledgments.

Mr. Steer, becoming anxious about his $12,000, employed defendant Leahy, a lawyer and his son-in-law, to look after his interest with the St. Louis Union Trust Company, Steer had learned that Portner had checked out practically all of the $12,000 deposit, and the $500 check spoken of above was paid out of sucli deposit. *163 Leahy calle.-! upon Stewart in the interest of his client, Steer. Smith was present at one or more of these meetings. Stewart, however, assured Leahy that Steer would he paid as soon as it was definitely determined that Tulley’s name had been forged. All this was before March 1, 1909.

The police, under the lead of defendant Smith, on the night of March 1st undertook to and did get a statement from plaintiff, after getting her and her mother to a police station. At this interview Leahy was present, and participated as plaintiff claims. After the conclusion of the interview, plaintiff and her mother were returned to their home. The officers were trying to locate Fortner, and wanted to get what information they could from plaintiff. They also had knowledge at the time of the alleged false certificates.

The petition complains of three distinct transactions, in as many counts, (1) an alleged false imprisonment on March 1, 1909, (2) a malicious prosecution on March 6, 1909, and (3) an alleged false imprisonment on March 6,1909.

The suit was originally brought against James H. Smith, A. C. Stewart, F. A. Steer, John S. Leahy and St. Louis Union Trust Company. The cause was dismissed as to Stewart and the Trust Company. Defendant F. A. Steer died and there was never a revivor as to him. In each count there is an alleged conspiracy charged, to have existed between all of the said original defendants. At time of trial only Smith and Leahy were left to do battle. Certain details as to the course of procedure become material.

Defendant Leahy in his answer, among other things, pleaded a misjoinder of causes of action and of parties defendant. This plea constituted a part of his answer to each of the three counts in the petition. At every opportunity he urged this point, and vehemently urges it here. He was present at the transaction of March 1, 1909, but was not present at the other transactions *164 involved in counts two and three. Two weeks were spent in the trial of the case, and upon its submission to a jury a verdict was finally reached as to defendant Leahy, the details of which will be left to t-he opinion. The court at the conclusion of all the evidence sustained the demurrers to the evidence of both Smith and Leahy as to the third count of the petition, and such count was not submitted to the jury at ail. Plaintiff voluntarily dismissed the second count of her petition upon the close of the whole case. The submission therefore was as to the first count only. As to this count the jury returned a verdict for defendant Leahy, but failed to agree upon a verdict as to defendant Smith, and the court declared a mistrial as to Smith, but the court expressly reserved the entry of judgment for Leahy until the whole case had been disposed of by verdict. Plaintiff filed her motion to set aside the involuntary nonsuit upon the third count, and to set aside the verdict for Leahy upon the first count. The court sustained plaintiff’s motion to set' aside .the nonsuit so far as defendant Smith was concerned, but overruled it as to Leahy. The court, sustained the order to set aside the verdict for Leahy, assigning in the record the following reasons:

“First: on the ground the court erred in sustaining defendant Smith’s demurrer to the evidence;

“Second: on the third ground of plaintiff’s motion that the verdict is not responsive to the issue;

Third: on the ground that the court erred in giving instructions numbered 7, 8 and 11;

“Fourth: upon the twenty-first ground of said motion, because the court erred in excluding competent and material evidence offered by plaintiff and particularly the evidence in Leahy’s deposition to the effect that he was and is worth substantially in excess of $250,000.”

From such order made on plaintiff’s motion the several appeals herein followed.. Plaintiff was not satisfied as to the ruling against her on the third count, in that Leahy was left out of that count. Leahy objects to having *165 had his verdict set aside, and Smith has several objections, which will be noted later. This outlines the case, except as to the evidence, and that will be left to the opinion, in so far as it may be applicable to the points made..

I.

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Bluebook (online)
264 S.W. 665, 305 Mo. 157, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hallen-v-smith-mo-1924.