National Surety Co. v. Roth

232 S.W. 737, 208 Mo. App. 277, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 105
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 27, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 232 S.W. 737 (National Surety Co. v. Roth) 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
National Surety Co. v. Roth, 232 S.W. 737, 208 Mo. App. 277, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 105 (Mo. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

TRIMBLE, P. J.

— This is an action upon a contract of indemnity given hy one Holter and the defendant, Roth, to the plaintiff, National Surety Company, in con *278 sideration of the latter executing, as surety for said Holter, a replevin bond in an action brought by said Holter to recover possession of certain grading machinery on which he held a chattel mortgage. The case first originated in the justice court, went on appeal to the circuit court where it was tried anew by the court sitting as a jury, and a judgment was rendered for plaintiff in the sum of $197.89 with six per cent interest from April 23, 1918, the date of the judgment rendered by the justice of the peace. The defendant has appealed.

Holter, owning a grading outfit, sold it to a firm of contractors in Kansas City, Kansas, and took a chattel mortgage thereon to secure payment of the purchase price, which mortgage was duly recorded in the proper county. The mortgagors afterward removed the property to Arkansas where they became involved and the outfit was there attached on a claim against thém. Holter, to get the property into his possession as mortgagee and out of the possession of the sheriff who held it under the attachment, resorted to replevin and to furnish the required replevin bond applied to the plaintiff, National Surety Company, through its local agent, Algire, in Kansas City, Kansas, to make such bond. Before the Surety Company would do so, it required Holter to execute, with a surety thereon, an indemnity contract. Holter executed it and procured the defendant, Roth, to sign it with him, Roth not having any interest whatever in the machinery nor being otherwise interested in the transaction in any way except to sign the indemnity contract as a friendly act in Holter’s behalf. Said indemnity contract is the one on which the suit herein is based.

That portion of the contract involving the matters herein sued for is as follows:

“That we will at all times indemnify and keep indemnified the company, and hold and save it harmless from and against any and all demands, liabilities, loss, damage or expense of whatsoever kind or nature, including counsel and attorney’s fees, which it shall at any *279 time sustain or incur by reason, or in consequence of having executed the said instrument.”

The replevin suit in Arkansas was disposed of in Holter’s favor in every respect, so that the plaintiff herein, the Surety Company, never became liable on the replevin bond. The money sued for in the case at bar, and for which the trial court rendered judgment in plaintiff’s favor, is for sums paid out by plaintiff, consisting of a fee of $150 paid to an attorney, a Mr. Carter, of Kansas City, Kansas, to prosecute the replevin suit, his expenses of $37.89 in going down to Arkansas, and $10 for a deposition which the attorney had taken in the replevin case, aggregating the $197.89 for which judgment was rendered with interest.

The contention of the defendant Roth in this suit is that the payment by the plaintiff Surety Company of these sums was voluntary and, therefore, they cannot be recovered.

It is shown by plaintiff’s own evidence, and it is therefore beyond dispute, that Holter employed Carter, who was, and theretofore had been, his attorney in other matters, to briny the replevin suit and to' carry it through to judgment, and the two had an understanding about fees and it was expected that the replevin suit would ultimately go to a higher court, though it afterwards turned out that it didn’t. Holter was to give him $50 and his expenses when he went down, and the two, Holter and Carter, went to Arkansas two or three times before trial of the replevin suit was reached or obtained, and Holter made two or three $50 payments to him, and also paid the expenses of both himself and Carter, except on the last trip, when the trial of the replevin suit was had. He, Holter, paid his own expenses on this last trip but says he did not pay Carter’s. The replevin suit was docketed for trial about the 24th of July, 1912:, so that this last trip was evidently made at a time when Carter had been employed by the plaintiff Surety Company and it had decided and told Carter it would pay them and reimburse itself at the expense of Roth, as the facts *280 hereinafter related will show. Nothing was ever said to Holter about paying them.

At some time prior to July 3, 1912, Carter, without consulting or saying anything to Holter about payment of further fees or expenses, and without ascertaining his attitude toward such matters or toward the prosecution of the replevin, suit, wrote to plaintiff’s local agent, Algire, telling him there was “some doubt” as to whether or not Holter would “probably prosecute his suit to a final conclusion” and that the purpose of his letter was to notify him, Algire, of the “probability” that Holter “will fail to properly prosecute this suit to a conclusion.”' Thereupon Algire, likewise without saying anything to Holter about it, wrote to Roth and Carter telephoned Roth about fees.

Defendant Roth thereupon went to Holter about it, but Holter denied that he was going to abandon the replevin suit. According to Roth,, Holter said, when asked by Roth about it, “No, that is wrong; I am going to go down there; I am staying right with it. I have stayed right with it and paid Mr. Carter money time after time on the contract. He took the case for me. I have been making payments and there is nothing to that whatever.” “Never mind, Carter is going to go. He is trying to pull that $75. out of you. He will go when it is time to go. I am going and he is going too.”

Holter did not deny this nor was he even asked to explain it. Of course, as this testimony was given by the defendant and the trial court’s finding was not in his favor, perhaps it can be said the trial court was not compelled to believe it was true. But it is in keeping with Roth’s conceded final refusal to furnish such fees as Algire and Carter had asked him to do; and in view of the conclusive fact that nothing had been or was ever said by either Algire or Carter to Holter about his willingness to pay or his attitude toward the replevin suit, and in view of the further indisputable fact that on July 3, 1912, Roth notified plaintiff that it was Carter who .was seeking to have some one other than *281 Holter “furnish the sinews of war” and the still further indisputable facts that not only did Holter not abandon the case but he stuck to it throughout until it was won, and that he did not deny that he told Roth this, it would seem that there was no reasonable ground for disbelieving Roth when he testified that Holter told him what he says he did. However, this testimony of Roth’s is not set forth as a material fact necessary to a judgment in Roth’s favor, but merely as a statement of what defendant claims is the reason for his refusal to furnish money to Carter at that time.

Whether or not Holter told Roth what the latter says he did is not material, but the indisputable

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
232 S.W. 737, 208 Mo. App. 277, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-surety-co-v-roth-moctapp-1921.