Morgan v. Hutcheson

21 S.E.2d 234, 67 Ga. App. 802, 1942 Ga. App. LEXIS 520
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJuly 10, 1942
Docket29464.
StatusPublished

This text of 21 S.E.2d 234 (Morgan v. Hutcheson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morgan v. Hutcheson, 21 S.E.2d 234, 67 Ga. App. 802, 1942 Ga. App. LEXIS 520 (Ga. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Felton, J.

Mrs. Morgan testified, in substance, as follows: that in 1933 she saw a piece in the paper that Mr. Hutcheson had gotten a claim through for a man; that she went to see him and he told her he had learned the claim was inactive; that later he wrote her to come to see him, and on October 21, 1934, in Mr. *806 Hutcheson’s office, he helped her fill out the claim; that she understood Mr. Hutcheson was a practicing attorney, and that he informed her that if her claim was not paid he would bring suit to enforce it; that he told her he was allowed to collect ten per cent, of the amount collected; that she did not agree at that time to pay him that, but later, in response to a letter, she went back to his office in December, 1934, at which time he informed her that he wanted a written contract and that he was allowed an extra five per cent, for the work he had done, making the total amount fifteen per cent.; that they argued about it and Hutcheson agreed to take twelve and one half per cent, provided no lawsuits were filed; that following that conversation the written contract was entered into at the suggestion of Hutcheson; that the contract was never rescinded and she paid Hutcheson under the terms of that contract; that the check which she gave Hutcheson represented 12% per cent, of the money she received from the Government, less $80 which was paid to her uncle as administrator of her husband’s estate which represented the costs of the bond; that the reason the $80 was deducted from Hutcheson’s fee was that she was not going to accept the check from the administrator, but was going to litigate over the amounts charged her by the administrator, and Hutcheson agreed that the $80 be taken from his fee; that Hutcheson did not pay the expenses to Indiana; that Hutcheson, her husband, and she drove to Indiana in her husband’s car; that the money could not be paid until 1935, and in October, 1935, they went to Knoxville, collected the money, and she paid the fee to Hutcheson the following day in Chattanooga, Tennessee; that Hutcheson stayed with her until his fee was paid; that she never agreed to give Hutcheson any money, and no such conversation as is alleged in his answer ever took place; that she learned in 1938 that at the time the contract with Hutcheson was made the claim for the insurance had already been allowed by the Government; that so far as she knew Hutcheson’s services in the collection of the insurance were nothing; Hutcheson did nothing save file the claim, or filled out the blank printed by the Government; that no suit of any kind was ever filed in connection with the claim for insurance; that if there had been no contract, or if it had been rescinded, Hutcheson could not reasonably have earned the amount paid him had he done everything which he did do in connection with the *807 claim; that Hutcheson did not mention employing a lawyer, but always said he was a lawyer himself and said he went through the Berry School of Law; that she believed that and acted on it; that Hutcheson had the usual equipment of a lawyer in his office, a desk, chair, typewriter and books; that he represented himself to be a lawyer in Indiana; that she first learned that the claim had been allowed before the contract was made when men from the Federal Bureau of Investigation came to interview her; that it was after a decision by the Supreme Court allowing veterans to collect on their insurance that Hutcheson aided her in filing her claim; that the decision was handed down in September, 1934, and she learned of it in October when he came to her and asked her to file a claim for the insurance; that Hutcheson told her he could get any information out of Washington through his American Legion; that she learned that $10 was all that could be charged for the assistance in filing the claim; that she got a letter from the Veterans Bureau that the act under which this claim was paid was passed by Congress and that the claim had been passed by the insurance claims counsel and nothing was done by anybody; that Hutcheson wanted to go to Indiana with her because he thought she would be appointed administrator and he could get his money quickly, and he told her that was the reason he wanted to go; that he said he wanted to buy a tract of land and insisted that she pay him the money.

Being cross-examined by Mr. Julius Sink, Mrs. Morgan testified substantially: that her husband did not file the original application to have the insurance paid, and that, according to a letter she had from Mr. Breining, there was never an application filed; that her husband left it with them, and nothing was ever done about it; that during the lifetime of-her husband she did not try to interest Mr. Jim Watson of Indiana in the prosecution of the claim, and did not so inform Mr. Hutcheson; that the claim was before the insurance division and then went before the claims counsel, and was allowed; that- she went to see Frank Gleason for the purpose of trying to get him to help on the claim, but he said he did not handle that kind of cases; that Mr. McNahon, a meat salesman, carried her in his car to see Mr. Hutcheson; that according to a letter she had from the Veterans Bureau Mr. Hutcheson did nothing toward the collection'of the claim; that she asked in 1924, *808 after the death of her husband, if there was any insxiranee due on the policy, and she was notified that her husband was not considered totally disabled and the claim was denied; that nothing was ever done about it until it went to the claims counsel; that Congressman McReynolds investigated after the claim was allowed, and found that Hutcheson had nothing to do with the allowance; that she did not know about it if Hutcheson wrote her in October, 1934, advising that the claim had been allowed, or whether she had been consulting and advising with him and following his directions since February, 1933; that she learned that the claim was allowed on December 7, 1934, some two months after it was allowed, when Hutcheson called her by long distance; that she did not advise Hutcheson that she was penniless; that her husband at that time had an office in Knoxville and Chattanooga, Tennessee; that Hutcheson went on his own accord to Indiana to collect the money; that she was not served with a copy of a notice to produce the letter written by Hutcheson to her, advising that he had done all he could in the case and that he could not charge anything for his services and that she would have to go on and look out-for it herself; that she never received any such letter; that she did not go to the office of Hutcheson and berate him for letting her down after receiving such a letter; that she did not make any such statement in the presence of Ed Puryear; that she never discussed the letter in the presence of Mr. Rink; that she did not bring any such letter to the office of Hutcheson and in the presence of W. A. Pack, J.

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Bluebook (online)
21 S.E.2d 234, 67 Ga. App. 802, 1942 Ga. App. LEXIS 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-v-hutcheson-gactapp-1942.