In re Frith

233 S.W.2d 707, 361 Mo. 98, 1950 Mo. LEXIS 705
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 13, 1950
DocketNo. 41786
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 233 S.W.2d 707 (In re Frith) 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
In re Frith, 233 S.W.2d 707, 361 Mo. 98, 1950 Mo. LEXIS 705 (Mo. 1950).

Opinion

LEEDY, J.

[ 707] This is a disciplinary proceeding against Robert C. Frith, an attorney at law (who will hereinafter be referred to as respondent), instituted in this court, by leave granted the Advisory Committee under rule 5.03. The information is in ten counts, each charging specific acts of professional misconduct. lion. Roy B. Meriwether, Judge of the Tenth Judicial Circuit, ordered transferred to this court (under § 6, Art. V. Const. of Mo. 1945) to serve as special commissioner herein, in .an able and exhaustive report of his findings of fact and conclusions of law, found respondent guilty on each of ten counts and recommended that he be suspended from the practice for a period of three years.

Five of the charges grow out of divorce cases in which respondent acted as an attorney, and five of them have to do with alleged solicitation of business, personally and through lay agents or runners, and dividing his fee for legal services with, or paying such agents or runners. The runner involved in four of these charges' is- the same individual, Fred Walker of Chillicothe.

The applicable legal principles are few. Indeed, the qualifications of a laAvyer and his duty to the court and to the public are so well defined by the canons of ethics embodied in rule 4, and understood by the practicing bar, as to make discussion of them unnecessary, in AdeAV of the situation here presented, which is basically one of fact. The proposition relied on by respondent is that the evidence does not justify a finding of guilty as to any count of the information. A reAdew of the eAÚdence is therefore required. There were several hearings before the Advisory Committee prior to the filing of the information. The'transcripts of the testimony taken at such hearings were, by agreement, introduced before the special commissioner, so that of the record before us, about 900 pages represents the oral testimony. Consequently, having regard to the space limitations of an opinion, it will be impracticable to develop the considerable number of collateral matters gone into upon the several hearings, or to do more than state the substance and effect of the testimony as the same is deemed to have a material bearing on the fact issues presented.

Respondent, 51 years of age, is a native of Livingston County, and he has resided there practically all his life. He was graduated from Law School in 1925, and, with the exception of two years, he has practiced at Chillicothe since 1926. He was City Attorney for [100]*100eight years; Prosecuting Attorney two years; member of the Board of Education about seven years, and still serving at the time of this hearing. For about two years during the recent war, he was employed in Kansas City by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, an instrumentality of the United States Government.

COUNT I — The Bradley Case — (1941)

This was an action for damages, filed by respondent as attorney for Mrs. Glenn Bradley of Trenton for personal injuries allegedly sustained by her as the result of a fall while crossing an overhead pedestrian bridge across the Rock Island tracks in [708] Trenton. This solicitation is alleged to have occurred in October, 1941. Only two witnesses testified concerning this matter, Walker and respondent, and their versions (both here and in the other cases) are in-such sharp and direct conflict as to foreclose any possibility of reconciling them. Walker testified that (the time and place he did not undertake to fix) respondent had approached him with the proposition that “if I could get any damage cases for him, we would go 50/50;” respondent came to, and importuned the witness to “make an effort” to get the Bradley ease for him, adding “it was an awful good .case, if he could get it.” Witness did not recall whether he made a special trip to Trenton for the purpose, but he did go there, and saw the woman’s husband at the Lafferty Drug Store where he worked (Mr. and Mrs Bradley were separated), got his permission to talk to the wife, and did so; but Mrs. Bradley was not interested, and he so reported to respondent. Walker returned later and again talked to her, at which time she told him “I could bring Mr. Frith over and she would talk to him. ’ ’ He did so, and Mrs. Bradley was still not interested after talking to respondent. He returned another time and talked to Mrs. Bradley, after which he again took respondent to see her, and at which time she gave him the case. It was finally disposed of by compromise and settlement for $750.00. Walker further testified that at the time of the settlement, he and the respondent went to Trenton from Chillicothe, and the Rock Island claim agent, in his (Walker’s) presence, delivered, as he recalled it, two checks to respondent; that he and the respondent then went to the drug store, procured the husband’s endorsement on the checks, then “we went across the street and made a settlement with her [Mrs. Bradley] and came on to Chillieothe. ” He further testified that respondent, after giving him $80.00 in cash in his (respondent’s) office, sent an employe to the bank with the Rock Island draft, and upon getting the money thereon, paid him the balance of the sum to which he was entitled under their agreement (50% of respondent’s fee), and that their settlement “was absolutely O. K.”

[101]*101Respondent denied that he had ever proposed to Walker that if the latter would go out and get cases for him, he would divide the fees, evenly or otherwise; and denied he had ever given Walker any part of any fee.

His version of the' Bradley case was that Walker contacted him four or five times about it, and that finally, while in Trenton on other business, and upon Walker’s insistence, he did go and talk (separately) to the Bradleys; that he told Walker he couldn’t see anything in the case; that he did not take a contract until after he had contacted the Rock Island adjuster and ascertained the railroad considered it a meritorious case; and that after “rather short” negotiations it was settled for $750.00.

He further testified that Mr. Bradley did not want, nor did he receive any portion of the proceeds of the settlement; that he (respondent) got the release signed by Bradley first and then by Mrs. Bradley, then delivered it to Mr. Caldwell, the claim adjuster, who gave him a draft — “just one draft”' — payable to Mr. and Mrs. Bradley and himself; that he took the draft tó Mr. Bradley, who endorsed it, and then took it to Mrs. Bradley, and she signed it; that because Mrs. Bradley did not want to deposit the money in a Trenton bank, he took the draft and deposited her half of it in an account he opened for her in a Chillicothe bank. He further testified that Walker was not with him when the draft “was made,” nor was he back at Chillicothe when he took it down there; that Walker’s connection with the case was in the capacity as an intermediary between Mr. and Mrs. Bradley, who, as hereinabove noted, were estranged; that Walker never at any time said anything about wanting any part of the proceeds of the settlement, nor did he ever give him any of the same. Respondent, while denying that Walker was with him when the settlement was closed and the endorsements of Mr. and Mrs. Bradley were procured on the draft, nevertheless admitted on cross-examination that “he [Walker] might have been with me when we got .the release signed, not when we endorsed the draft;” and that it was his recollection that the release and drafts [709] were procured the same day. He was asked again if he was sure that Walker was not with him when he was procuring the endorsements of Mr. and Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
233 S.W.2d 707, 361 Mo. 98, 1950 Mo. LEXIS 705, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-frith-mo-1950.