Pindall v. Waterman

106 S.W. 964, 84 Ark. 575
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 16, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 106 S.W. 964 (Pindall v. Waterman) 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
Pindall v. Waterman, 106 S.W. 964, 84 Ark. 575 (Ark. 1907).

Opinion

Battue, J.

The above suits grew out of the same facts, and involved the same principles of law and equity, and have been submitted for our consideration upon the same briefs.

The facts, as shown by the evidence adduced in these causes, are substantially as follows: J. J. Schmidt resided in Desha County, in this State. Pie was about sixty years old; was industrious and penurious; and acquired an estate of about the value of $8,089.60. He killed R. H. Willis, another citizen of Desha. He was arrested, charged with murder in the first degree. “Excitement was very high immediately after the killing. Mob violence was threatened and feared.” He was hurried away to Arkansas City to avoid the mob. He underwent a great change on account of the trouble and excitement •following the killing. Witnesses say, he seemed to be- dazed and stunned, and not the same man he had been. He looked haggard and broken. His voice did not sound natural. He appeared to be in great trouble. He was nervous and excited. One witness says he impressed him as a man who did not know exactly what he was doing. He says: “After having been carried to dinner and then back to’ the court house for supper, he turned and went in the wrong direction. He didn’t seem to know the way to the hotel.” Witnesses differed as to his sanity, but the majority thought he was sane. He was imprisoned in jail. While incarcerated, E. S. Pindall and X. O. Pindall, two attorneys, presumably at his request, had an interview with him, while in the condition before stated. The result was he1 executed a note to E. S. Pindall for $5,000 for .a fee for services to be rendered in defending Schmidt against the charge of killing Willis, and a mortgage on lot six in block seven in Evans’s addition to the town of Dumas, and the southwest quarter of section 34 in township 9, south, and range four west, of the value of $5,000 which constituted all the real estate owned by Schmidt; and X. O. Pindall, associated with E. S., received for services to be rendered in the same behalf the promissory note of the Dumas Mercantile Company for $500, and .forty shares in the stock of the Bank of Dumas, of the par value of $25 each, and $500 in money, and a draft.on the Dumas Mercantile Company for $500, leaving Schmidt, out of an estate of $8,-089.60, $1,089.69 represented by a small amount of cash, some rent notes not due, two mares, some farming implements, a lot of household furniture, two mule colts and a saddle. Dor the fees so secured the Pindalls, in part performance of their contract, sued out a writ of habeas corpus, and caused Schmidt to be admitted to bail in the sum of $5,000, and his discharge from imprisonment. In two days thereafter Schmidt was found dead, hanging by the neck in his barn. He died intestate, leaving H. J. Schmidt his only son and heir surviving. Gus Waterman was appointed the administrator of his estate.

H. J. Schmidt, heir, and Gus Waterman, as administrator of J. J. Schmidt, deceased, brought suit in the Desha Chancery Court against E. S. Pindall and X. O. Pindall to set aside the note and mortgage executed to E. S. Pindall, and, among other things, state as follows:

“Plaintiffs say at the time the defendants procured said Schmidt’s signature to said note and mortgage said Schmidt was .not indebted to said E. S. Pindall in any sum.

“Plaintiffs say that at the time defendants procured the signature of said Schmidt to said note and mortgage said Schmidt was insane, and by reason of his insanity was incapable of entering into a valid and binding contract.

“Plaintiffs say that plaintiff H. J. Schmidt is the owner in fee simple of said land, subject to such interest as his co-plaintiff may have therein for the purpose of administration.

“Plaintiffs say that defendant E. S. Pindall is a practicing attorney at law; that at the time defendant procured said note and mortgage from said Schmidt the latter was confined in the jail of Desha County, upon a charge of murder in the first degree; that defendant claims that he was employed by said Schmidt to defend him upon said charge in all the courts to which same might be carried, and that property was delivered to him in payment for services to be rendered. Plaintiffs say that the only service which defendant rendered said Schmidt was in appearing before the county judge of Desha County in habeas corpus proceedings by which Schmidt was granted bail in the sum of five thousand dollars; that within two days after executing said bail and being released from jail said Schmidt died,- committing suicide by hanging himself.

“Plaintiffs say that by reason of the death of said Schmidt the service to be rendered which defendant claims is the consideration for which said note and mortgage were delivered to him cannot be performed, that said consideration has failed, and that defendant has not given nor can he give any consideration for said sum; that if defendant’s claim that said note and mortgage were delivered to him under contract be true, defendant is not entitled to retain nor enforce same, because said contract is now impossible of performance.

“Plaintiffs further say that at'the time at which defendant claims to have entered into said contract with said Schmidt the latter was insane, and by reason of his insanity could not make a valid and binding contract; that said contract is null, and that defendant acquired no lien on said property thereby.”

The defendant E. S. Pindall answered in part as follows:

“The defendant denies that the note and mortgage to him was without consideration, and says that at the time it was made the defendant Schmidt employed said E. S. Pindall and X. O. Pindall to defend him on the charge of murder in the first degree, and state that this defendant, and X. O. Pindall, his co-' defendant, are attorneys at law, practicing in the courts of Desha County, and in other counties of the State and in the Supreme Court of the State of Arkansas.

“Defendant denies that the said Schmidt at the time of executing the note and mortgage was insane, and therefore incapable of entering into a valid and binding contract.

“Defendant, further answering, pleads the truth of this matter to be as follows: Said Schmidt, being charged with the crime of murder in the first degree, and arrested on said charge, employed this defendant, who is an attorney at law, as stated, as one of his attorneys to defend him; that it was expressly agreed between this defendant and the said Schmidt that this defendant’s retainer should be $5,000, and said Schmidt executed the note and mortgage in question as payment, and security for payment of said sum, the contract being thereupon consummated; this defendant entered into the discharge of his employment, and has performed all the services required of him under said employment; that the note and mortgage belong to this defendant.”

In this case the court found that the allegation of insanity was not sustained; that by the death of Schmidt the consideration of the note and mortgage had failed, but that E. S. Pindall had received no compensation for his services in the habeas corpus proceedings, and that such services were reasonably worth $500; that E. S. Pindall was indebted to the estate of Schmidt for the occupation of the residence of the deceased in the sum of $72, -and ordered and decreed that plaintiff pay to him (E. S. Pindall) the sum of $428, and upon payment thereof that E. S.

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Bluebook (online)
106 S.W. 964, 84 Ark. 575, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pindall-v-waterman-ark-1907.