Nichols v. Little

165 S.W. 301, 112 Ark. 213, 1914 Ark. LEXIS 222
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 23, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 165 S.W. 301 (Nichols v. Little) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nichols v. Little, 165 S.W. 301, 112 Ark. 213, 1914 Ark. LEXIS 222 (Ark. 1914).

Opinion

Smith, J.

This was a summary proceeding in the Pulaski Circuit Court against appellant, an attorney of said court, charging that he was employed hv appellee in the year 1909 to collect $400 due her by the Arkansas Baptist College and that in said year he collected said sum but failed and refused to pay same over to her after demand. The notice of the motion for a summary judgment concluded with the following statement: “Wherefore, premises considered, plaintiff will on the date first above mentioned move this honorable court to give her a summary judgment against you for said sum of $400, less your said fee as attorney; and to deal with you further as the court may deem just under the circumstances. ’ ’

Appellant responded to this motion alleging that appellee had placed in his hands for collection a note payable to her order, executed by the Arkansas Baptist College, with the understanding that he should have a fee of one-fifth of any amount collected by him'and that he had only collected the sum of $25, which he had paid appellee. He alleged that he had been unable to make the collection, and, acting under appellee’s instructions, had attempted to sell the note, but had been unable to secure a purchaser, and after some negotiations finally bought the note from appellee for the sum of $50. He says that he thereafter brought suit on said note in his own name and collected the $400 balance due, and that when appellee had heard what he received thereon she became dissatisfied and made complaint to him, whereupon, to pacify appellee, he, on October 7, 1910, gave her his note in the sum of $150, payable one year after date, and after paying the interest at the maturity of the note gave her a new note for $150 due one year from its date. Appellant alleged that he offered to pay appellee through her attorneys the said $150 note and the interest thereon in full satisfaction of all sums due from him to her, but same had been refused, and appellant made tender of that amount by bringing the same into court and offering the same in full satisfaction of any demand of appellee against him.

It is impossible to reconcile the evidence. According to appellee’s contention, he bought the note for the sum of $50 and took an assignment of it by the following endorsement written upon its face:

“Sold to W. H. Nichols, February 1, 1908, for valuable consideration.
“Julia Little.
‘ ‘ Witness: W. H. H. Eiley. ’ ’

Appellee was corroborated by Eiley, who testified that he witnessed the transaction between the parties and signed appellee’s name at her request. Appellant admits collecting the entire amount of the note some time after having brought suit upon it, and testified that when appellee became aware of that fact she told him that the neighbors had chided her for having sold the note for such a small sum, and that she asked him to give her a note for the sum of $150 just to show them, and that he executed this note without knowing that appellee would expect him to pay it. He admits, however, that she did call upon him for its payment and he paid a year’s interest thereon under protest, and finally executed a new note in renewal of the old one, and this is the note which, with the interest thereon, appellant in his response offered to pay in full satisfaction of appellee’s demand against him. The effect of his contention is that, although he did not owe this note, he had executed it and renewed it in compromise and settlement of. appellee’s demand, and made a tender in satisfaction of that compromise.

Appellee was a colored woman seventy-three years of age, and was uneducated, but appears to have owned •some income producing property in the city of Little Rock and to have had several hundred dollars in money, and had intrusted the management of all her business affairs to appellant. The note which appellant had for collection was dated January 5, 1900, and was originally for the sum of $700; but various payments had been made on this note until only the sum of $175 was due on it at the time it was placed in appellant’s hands for collection. Appellee did not want to sue the college for the reason that her husband had been one of the trustees of that institution in his lifetime, and she said that she regarded the note as perfectly good, and she thought appellant could make the collection by annoying the trustees about the note; but appellant finally said that he would be unable to make collection and .it would be necessary to bring suit and that the note would have to be endorsed to him before he could bring suit in his own name. She further testified that she wrote her name across the face of the note and that the words, “Sold to W. H. Nichols, February 1,1908, for a valuable consideration,” were subsequently written above her signature, and that they were placed there without her knowledge. There was evidence tending to corroborate her in this contention, and there was other evidence corroborating and contradicting each of the parties, which it will not he necessary to set ont. Appellee’s confidence in appellant is shown by the fact that she deposited in his name in the Capital City Savings Bank the snm of $600, and he testified that he had no knowledge of this deposit until that institution failed.

We think that even though the endorsement above appellee’s name might have been written there before her own name was signed, that this was done simply to transfer the note to appellant and to authorize him to sue in his own name. Appellee regarded the note as being worth its face value, notwithstanding the difficulty she experienced in the collection of it, and she appears to have been in 'no need of money. She further testified that appellant paid her $50 shortly after he had brought suit on the note and that he later gave her the $150 note to cover additional collections which he had made thereon. And upon the whole case, we think the evidence abundantly sustains the finding that appellant did not have the note as a purchaser, but only for the purpose of collection as an attorney. .

Upon appellant’s cross examination, the attorney for the appellee was permitted over appellant’s objection to interrogate him touching an alleged offer of compromise which had been made for the settlement of this claim. Such evidence is ordinarily incompetent, and in this case would call for the reversal of the judgment but for the fact that appellant had alleged in his response a compromise and settlement, and had given evidence in support of this allegation. Having injected that issue into the case, it was not improper for appellee to show what the facts were in regard to that settlement, for the effect of this evidence is to disprove the allegation that the $150 note had been executed in satisfaction of the controversy of appellant’s alleged purchase.

At the conclusion of the evidence the court awarded judgment against appellant for the amount of the note with the interest thereon less the attorney’s fee of 5 per cent, which appellee had agreed to pay him, and, thereupon, without further pleadings having been filed, entered an order as a part of the judgment in this case suspending appellant from the practice of law until a committee appointed by the court should prepare and file against appellant charges looking to his disbarment, by reason of his acts as herein found and until the further order of that court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
165 S.W. 301, 112 Ark. 213, 1914 Ark. LEXIS 222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nichols-v-little-ark-1914.