Haunstein v. McCalister

46 P.2d 552, 172 Okla. 613, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 1484
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 18, 1935
DocketNo. 23970.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 46 P.2d 552 (Haunstein v. McCalister) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haunstein v. McCalister, 46 P.2d 552, 172 Okla. 613, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 1484 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

CORN, J.

This action was brought in the district court of Garfield county by Levi McCalister, as plaintiff, against Paul R. Haunstein, defendant, for the recovery of the sum of $2,527.15. The plaintiff obtained judgment in the sum of $1,259.15, with interest at the rate of G per cent, per annum from January 30, 1932, from which the defendant appeals. The parties will be referred to herein as they appeared in the trial court.

This action arose out of a controversy between an attorney and Ms client over the above-mentioned sum of money, which the attorney, Paul R. Haunstein, claims was paid to him as a fee for legal services, while the client, Levi McCalister, contends that he placed the money in the hands of his attorney for the purpose of paying certain claims in a bankruptcy .matter, and that Haunstein failed to apply the money to the payment of said claims. The parties did not have a written contract to show what the agreement was between them, and it seems that a detailed statement of the facts developed at the trial is essential to a proper understanding of the case. The facts as shown by the record are as follows:

In the year 1909, one Ella Hubbard obtained a judgment in the district court of Kingfisher county against the said Levi Mc-Calister in the sum of $300 in a suit for damages for. malicious prosecution. The judgment was kept alive, but- McCalister successfully evaded payment of the same over a period of 20 years. The judgment creditor, in later years being a resident of Colorado, had placed the judgment in the hands of Brownlee & Blaine, attorneys at Kingfisher, for collection. Mr. T. R. Blaine had active charge of enforcing the same.

On July 31, 1929, Blaine had an execution issued on said judgment and placed in the hands of the sheriff of Kingfisher county, and George M. Hawks, deputy sheriff, went out to the Levi McCalister farm to levy upon property for the satisfaction of the judgment. McCalister claimed that the judgment was dormant and threatened the deputy sheriff with damage suit if he levied upon his property. • However, he told the deputy sheriff that he would make an investigation of the judgment and if he found it to be a valid judgment, he would settle it. 1-Ie was to report to the sheriff’s office after the investigation was completed. Mc-Calister went to his attorney, Lee Gray, at Hennessey and employed him to go to Kingfisher to examine the record and to ascertain whether or not the judgment was still in force. The examination was made and the' attorney informed McCalister that the judgment was still in force and effect. Mc-Calister, instead of reporting to the sheriff’s office, counseled with Mr. Gray relative to taking bankruptcy to evade the payment of the judgment, and Gray advised against such a course. McCalister insisted on taking that course, and Gray, not desiring to represent him in said matter, suggested that he go to1 Enid and employ an attorney who was experienced in bankruptcy practice, and recommended Paul R. Haunstein as a capable attorney. Gray gave McCalister a set of bankruptcy blanks to be used in filing the case. Before going to Haunstein and without the knowledge of Gray', McCalister conveyed ia property in Enid to his wife and his son, Mark E. McCalister, sent a bank draft for $178 to Mrs. Bell Blesh in California and transferred the balance of his bank account to his wife, and secreted some of his personal property.

On August 0th, he went to Haunstein’s office in Enid and told him what he wanted to do and handed him the bankruptcy blanks which Gray had given him. Haun-stein asked him why he did not have Gray handle the matter, and he told Haunstein that Gray was not taking bankruptcy cases, and that Gray had recommended him. This was the first time that McCalister and Haunstein had ever met. Haunstein pre *615 pared the petition and schedules from the information given him by McCalister and had them signed and verified by McCalister and mailed them to the Ü. S. district clerk at Oklahoma City for filing on August 7, 1929. Just before this, however, the deputy sheriff had returned and levied on certain nonexempt personal property, inc.uding some hay, and on Saturday before the first meeting of the creditors at Guthrie, McCal-ister went to Haunstein’s office and told him that he had left some hay out of the schedules, and that he had transferred the Enid property and had sent the money to the lady in California; that the Enid property belonged to his wife and son and that he had made the transfer in order that it might not be mixed up in the bankruptcy matter, and that the money sent to the lady in California was trust funds and that he transferred it for the same reason. He stated that he had forgotten to mention these matters when he made out his schedules. Haunstein told him that he would have the schedules amended to include the hay, and that the referee would require strict proof as to the Enid property and the trust funds.

Haunstein was delayed by rain and muddy roads and did not arrive at the hearing before the referee until T. R. Blaine, attorney for the judgment creditor, had commenced his examination of the bankrupt. In the examination McCalister’s testimony was conflicting about how he received the money from his son, which he claimed went into the purchase of the Enid property. The referee, not being satisfied with the testimony, continued the hearing to a later date, appointed a trustee and ordered an ¡investigation of McCalister’s claims with reference to the trust property. Haunstein, not arriving in time to lay these matters before the referee, and the same being brought out in the examination of the bankrupt, was placed in an embarrassing position, and felt humiliated over what had transpired at the hearing. After the hearing he told McCalister that matters had become complicated and that due to the fact that they were practically strangers,, he did not care to discuss the matter with him there, but thought they should have a meeting at Lee Gray’s office at Hennessey and discuss the matter with Mr. Gray, who was his attorney. A short time afterwards they met at Gray’s office, and Gray advised Mc-Calister as to the seriousness of the situation and told him that he should be able to prove his statements with reference to receiving the cash from his son to pay on the Enid property. Another hearing was to be had within the next few days, and Mc-Calister’s wife and daughter had been subpoenaed to appear as witnesses at said hearing.

In the meantime Blaine had talked to Gray about McCalister’s conduct in the bankruptcy matter and told Gray that he had several criminal charges that could be filed against McCalister and that he intended to turn them over to the U. S. district attorney’s office after he had collected his judgment. He also said that he believed Haunstein had conspired with McCalister to defraud the creditors, and left the inference that Haunstein should also be prosecuted. At that time Blaine did not know that Gray had any connection with the case. Gray told McCalister and Haunstein what Blaine had said about preferring criminal charges.

McCalister had first testified that his son, Mark, had shipped the money to him by express from Auburn, Neb., where his son worked in an express office, and then changed his testimony to the effect that his son had brought the money down and delivered it to him personally.

McCalister immediately went to Auburn, Neb., for a conference with his son, and while there wired back to Haunstein to ascertain the exact date his proof should show that the express receipt was issued.

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Bluebook (online)
46 P.2d 552, 172 Okla. 613, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 1484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haunstein-v-mccalister-okla-1935.