Magee v. Pope

112 S.W.2d 891, 234 Mo. App. 191, 1938 Mo. App. LEXIS 67
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 1, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 112 S.W.2d 891 (Magee v. Pope) 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
Magee v. Pope, 112 S.W.2d 891, 234 Mo. App. 191, 1938 Mo. App. LEXIS 67 (Mo. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

*195 HOSTETTER, P. J.

This is a suit in equity which was begun in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis on May 8, 1935, in which plaintiff sought to cancel a certain promissory note dated November 9, 1934, for $5000, payable in monthly installments of $83.331/3 each to the defendant, Mrs. Iva Pope, and to recover $249.99 paid thereon, on the ground that the said note was without any consideration.

The facts concerning the making and delivery of the note are substantially as follows: Dr. Charles H. Pope was a practicing physician in the city of St. Louis and maintained offices in Rooms 1889 and 1890, Railway Exchange Building, where he had an office practice which included making examinations for insurance companies. From time to time Dr. Pope had associates who looked after some of the insurance examinations and took care of patients when he did not care to serve, such as maternity, heart, ear, nose and throat cases, and on one occasion to look after his office practice while- he was away on a vacation. Before such associations- were permitted1 to make insurance examinations Dr. Pope asked the insurance companies • permission to have such associates make examinations and to that end had such associates to complete regular application blanks furnished by the respective insurance companies, giving the qualification and experience of such associate, after which the ■ insurance companies ran an inspection report for the purpose of ascertaining the professional, moral and financial standing of such associates and, upon finding them possessed of satisfactory qualifications, such associates were authorized by the insurance companies to make examinations. Among the associates of Dr. Pope was the plaintiff; Dr. Magee, who graduated from the St.-Louis Medical School in 1925,- *196 and, after his interneship, became an associate of Dr. Pope in 1927 or 1928. While associated with Dr. Pope the plaintiff completed the usual applications requested by the insurance company for whom he was to make examinations when Dr. Pope was not able to make them, and the usual inspection was had upon him after which he was duly appointed as examiner for such companies.

At one time the plaintiff, Dr. Magee, moved into adjoining offices to Dr. Pope in the same suite, with the understanding that Dr. Pope would refer to plaintiff a sufficient number of examinations to enable him to earn therefrom his office rental. This continued for some time and Dr. Pope having failed to refer to Dr. Magee sufficient examinations to permit him to earn his office rent, the latter finally moved his offices to Vandeventer and Shaw Avenues in another part of the city, where he maintained his own private practice as well as continuing to make examinations for insurance companies by whom he was authorized when Dr. Pope was not able to make such examinations. This procedure continued until Dr. Pope’s sudden death, which occurred on Saturday, November 3, 1934.

In August of 1934 Dr. Pope left for a vacation and at that time had requested Dr. Magee to look after the insurance examinations and also to look after his office in the Railway Exchange Building.

Immediately after Dr. Pope’s death, Dr. Magee communicated with Mrs. Iva Pope, his widow and one of the defendants herein, and asked if there was anything that he could do. Thereupon he was given several insurance examination blanks for which Dr. Pope had appointments for examinations, but which he had failed to make prior to his death. Dr. Magee being authorized by said insurance companies to make examinations for them, proceeded to make the same and on the following office day, Monday, November 5, he proceeded to the office of Dr. Pope as he had during Dr. Pope’s absence on vacation in August, and on that same morning was approached by Mr. Van Vleet, brother of Mrs. Pope, and by S. C. Rogers, her attorney, and ' the latter advised him that “they wanted to sell him the business of Dr. Pope on the same basis as if he (Dr. Pope) was retiring from business” and suggested that the basis of compensation for such sale should be twenty per cent of all of the earnings from said practice for the succeeding five-year period. This suggestion did not appear satisfactory to Dr. Magee for the reason that such practice would be unethical and frowned upon by the medical profession. Thereupon, it was suggested that the price of $10,000 be paid for said practice, but this was also not satisfactory and nothing further was done on that day.

A day or two later Mrs. Pope called on Dr. Magee and asked $7500. This was also unsatisfactory to him and it was not until Friday, November 9, 1934, when Mrs. Pope again called on Dr. Ma-gee and finally agreed to accept $5000 for the practice and good will *197 of Dr. Pope, that the proposition was satisfactory to him. Immediately upon the acceptance, Mrs. Pope said that she would have an agreement drawn up, and, shortly thereafter,, returned with Mr. Rogers, her attorney, and presented to Dr. Magee a typewritten paper purported to be the agreement which Mr. Rogers had prepared and which she requested Dr.'Magee to sign. Mr. Rogers suggested that he understood that he (Dr. Magee) was capable of handling Dr. Pope’s business and that they were selling this business to him on the same basis as if Dr. Pope was retiring from practice. Thereupon Dr. Magee suggested that he would like to have his attorney look over the agreement, but Mrs. Pope said: “I wouldn’t talk to an attorney because he knew so little about medical affairs.” Thereupon Dr. Magee signed said note and delivered it to Mrs. Pope.

Then Dr. Magee purchased certain of the office furniture from the St. Louis Union Trust Company and Mrs. Pope for the sum of $196.06, for which amount he gave to said executors his promissory note, together with a chattel mortgage on the said equipment and said note was thereafter duly paid by Dr. Magee to the executors.

After the execution and delivery of the $5000 note, Mrs. Pope delivered the same to the St. Louis Union Trust Company as her collection agent for the purpose of collecting and receiving the payments thereon and crediting the same to her account in a living trust which she had set up. Dr. Magee made three monthly payments on said note, each in the sum of $83.33, but was unable to make any further payments, having lost considerable of the insurance examinations which Dr. Pope had, for the reason that the insurance companies had appointed additional examiners. Dr. Magee then talked with Mrs. Pope and told her of these facts and told her that he had ascertained that the practice and good will of Dr. Pope was not a saleable item and that he could not hold said practice, but Mrs. Pope refused to reduce the amount of the note and insisted upon the payments being made as agreed upon.

Thereupon Dr. Magee consulted counsel and upon their advice that the good will and practice of Dr. Pope was not a subject of sale after his death, he refused to make any further payments on said note and this suit was begun to cancel the note and prevent its sale to other parties and to recover judgment for the amount previously paid thereon.

The salient facts being set up in the petition, the relief prayed for was that both defendants, Mrs. Pope and the St.

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Bluebook (online)
112 S.W.2d 891, 234 Mo. App. 191, 1938 Mo. App. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/magee-v-pope-moctapp-1938.