Kraehe v. Dorsey

432 S.W.2d 367, 1968 Mo. App. LEXIS 630
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 17, 1968
Docket32834
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 432 S.W.2d 367 (Kraehe v. Dorsey) 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
Kraehe v. Dorsey, 432 S.W.2d 367, 1968 Mo. App. LEXIS 630 (Mo. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

RUSSELL H. DOERNER, Commissioner.

Plaintiff Enno Kraehe brought this action against the defendants to recover the-sum of $1,000 alleged to be due him for, services rendered in appraising certain real estate known as Old Westlake Park, located in St. Louis County. By separate answers, one filed by defendant Dorsey and the other by the remaining defendants, (hereafter referred to as the other defendants), liability was denied, and in addition Dorsey filed a counterclaim for damages of $10,000 claimed to have been suffered because plaintiff negligently prepared his appraisal. At the conclusion of plaintiff’s opening statement Dorsey, a lawyer, who appeared pro se, and the other defendants, separately moved that the plaintiff’s cause of action be dismissed as to them. The trial court overruled Dorsey’s motion but sustained that of the other defendants. The trial then proceeded as to Dorsey alone, and resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff and against Dorsey for $1,000. Within the prescribed time plaintiff filed a motion for a new trial as to the other defendants, and Dorsey filed a similar motion as to the judgment against him. The court sustained both motions, and plaintiff thereupon appealed from that part of the court’s order setting aside the judgment against Dorsey and granting him a new trial. The other defendants did not appeal.

This litigation grew out of a condemnation case brought by the State Highway Commission in 1960 to acquire for highway purposes about 10 of the approximately 37 acres comprising Old Westlake Park. The property was actually owned, in undivided one-fourth interests, by defendants Frank Spica, Joseph Spica and Mary Lou Spica, his wife, William S. Bahn and Dorothy Ann Bahn, his wife, and the J. W. Wood Realty Company, but title thereto stood in the name of Helen Carpenter, a straw party. Plaintiff’s testimony was that in 1960 Dorsey employed him to appraise the property, at which time he told Dorsey that his fee would be between $1800 and $2000, and Dorsey indicated that amount would be satisfactory. When first employed he in *369 formed Dorsey, plaintiff related, that he didn’t know how soon he could prepare a written report, but that he could get enough material together to appear at the Commissioners’ hearing if he didn’t have the report ready. He did appear at the hearing held by the Commissioners appointed by the court in the condemnation case, and gave it as his opinion that the value of the property to be taken was $83,000.00. Subsequently, in November 1962, he submitted his written report to Dorsey in which he concluded that the amount of damages caused by the taking was $60,000. In explanation of the difference in the figures plaintiff testified that a further study of other transactions in the area made after the Commissioners’ hearing caused him to come up with a different figure he thought was more justified by the facts. He related that he sent Dorsey a bill for $1500 and received $500, but that the remainder was never paid. Plaintiff testified, that based upon the time spent and the expenses he incurred $1500 was a reasonable charge for the services rendered, and in this he was supported by two professional appraisers called by him as expert witnesses. He stated that Dorsey had never told him who the owners of the property were, that he assumed Helen Carpenter was a straw party, and that he never knew who the actual owners were until this litigation arose.

Bahn, who is also a member of the Bar, appearing as Dorsey’s witness, testified that he had discussed the employment of an attorney with the other owners, and had been authorized by them to engage counsel to represent them in the condemnation case. He employed Dorsey for that purpose, and they agreed that Dorsey’s fee would be 25% of any recovery in excess of the $43,000 which the Highway Commission had previously offered to pay. Bahn stated that he authorized Dorsey to employ an appraiser and recommended plaintiff to Dorsey. It is impossible to determine from the transcript the chronological order of the ensuing events, but it would appear that Dorsey employed plaintiff, that the condemnation Commissioners’ hearing was held, and that almost two years later plaintiff submitted his written report and bill to Dorsey. According to Bahn, the Commissioners made an award of damages of $70,000 to which both the owners and the Highway Commission filed exceptions, but whether that award was made before or after plaintiff made his written report does not appear. Bahn also testified that after the Commissioners made their award the Highway Commission offered to settle for $67,500, but that the owners had not accepted the offer and that the condemnation case was still pending. When Dorsey orally informed him that plaintiff wanted $1500 for his services, Bahn related, he responded that the suit wasn’t settled, that on the basis of plaintiff’s past performance $1500 was entirely too high, and that anything over $500 for what plaintiff had done would be out of line and exorbitant.

Dorsey testified that while he could not say it was impossible that plaintiff had quoted him a figure of $1500 or $2000 when he employed plaintiff, he did not remember such a quotation. He also said, “ * * * I have found in the past with Mr. Kraehe we pay him a reasonable fee for his services. The reason he was not paid in this case is I did not have the money available. I am the agent of the property owners. The money that was given to me by the property owners to pay Mr. Kraehe was forwarded to him and he has received the $500.00 which I received. If a judgment is rendered against me I would pay it from my own pocket.”

Dorsey’s motion for a new trial contains twelve assignments of error, two of which include various subsections. The first six are couched in such shop-worn generalities as “* * * the verdict is contrary to the law and evidence” and “* * * the verdict of the jury and the judgment of the Court therein is contrary to the law and *370 evidence.” Such assignments raise nothing and are meaningless. Treon v. City of Hamilton, Mo., 363 S.W.2d 704, 708. Nevertheless, in his order sustaining Dorsey’s motion for a new trial the court stated that he did so “on all grounds” contained in the motion. The approval by a trial cóurt of “shotgun” assignments of error in a motion for a new trial has been viewed with disfavor by the Supreme Court, Caldwell v. St. Louis Public Service Co., Mo., 275 S.W.2d 288, 290, a view we share. For as plaintiff justifiably complains, under the circumstances here prevailing such a blanket approval of Dorsey’s motion for a new trial has placed upon plaintiff the burden ■of attempting to refute, one by one, the twelve assignments of error set forth in that motion. Nor has plaintiff’s burden, or that of this court, been lightened by Dorsey’s failure to file a brief in this court in support of the trial court’s action.

For the most part plaintiff has borne the burden of refutation thus injudiciously cast upon him. But one of Dorsey’s assignments in his motion for a new trial was that the court erred in sustaining the motion of the other defendants to dismiss them from the action, made at the conclusion of the opening statement by plaintiff’s counsel. There can be no reasonable doubt that the trial court erred in sustaining what was tantamount to a motion for a directed verdict in favor of the other defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
432 S.W.2d 367, 1968 Mo. App. LEXIS 630, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kraehe-v-dorsey-moctapp-1968.