Pritchett v. Northwestern Mutual Insurance

73 S.W.2d 815, 228 Mo. App. 661, 1934 Mo. App. LEXIS 140
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 18, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 73 S.W.2d 815 (Pritchett v. Northwestern Mutual Insurance) 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
Pritchett v. Northwestern Mutual Insurance, 73 S.W.2d 815, 228 Mo. App. 661, 1934 Mo. App. LEXIS 140 (Mo. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

BAILEY, J.

This is an action for malicious prosecution over the alleged stealing of certain farm crops. Plaintiff, before a jury, recovered a judgment for $500 actual damages and $2500 punitive damages from which judgment defendants have appealed.

There are fourteen assignments of error, the first of which is that the trial court erred in refusing to give defendants’ instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence offered at the close of plaintiff’s case and again at the close of the whole ease. By introducing their evidence after their demurrer at the close of plaintiff’s case had been overruled, defendants waived any exceptions thereto. [Hamman v. Central Coal & Coke Co., 156 Mo. 232, 56 S. W. 1091.]

In passing on the demurrer offered at the close of the whole case, we are required to give plaintiff the benefit of all the evidence in his favor as well as all reasonable inferences that might be drawn therefrom and if there is any substantial evidence to support the verdict, the demurrer will be considered as having been properly overruled. So much is conceded.

*663 Tbe abstract of the record consists of some 185 pages and most of the testimony is set out in full together with all the objections, arguments thereon, bickerings, rulings and many other matters that really should not be in the printed abstract under our rules. We mention this for the reason that so large a part of the record is taken up with such things, most of which are immaterial on this appeal, and in many instances require the reading of several pages of record in order to find anything of substance. We appreciate the fact that this was an unusually hotly contested lawsuit, which must have tried the patience of the trial court as well as counsel. For that reason we are disposed to be lenient, although there can be no doubt our rules have been rather ignored in preparing the abstract.

Lee Pritchett, plaintiff herein, is a man of color and a farmer. When the scene opens he was living near Bernie, in Stoddard County. He and another colored man named M. D. Giles became interested in purchasing a farm in Stoddard County consisting of 380 acres. This farm at the time, March, 1930, belonged to a man named Lott subject to a deed of trust securing a note therein described, to the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company, one of the defendants. A real estate man, Higginbotham, was a broker for this land and in some way had gotten in touch with plaintiff and Giles. No sale of the land was actually consummated, but an oral arrangement was made through Higginbotham by which plaintiff was to purchase 160 acres of the said land and Giles 120. Neither plaintiff nor Giles, who was a colored preacher (which may account for his financial status) had any money whatever. But this proved to be no particular hindrance. A verbal agreement was made by which plaintiff was to pay about $42 per acre for his part of the land, a mere $8700 in all, and Higginbotham required $500 paid down. But plaintiff, having no such amount of money, it was agreed that he should go on the land and farm it anyhow and pay the $500 by certain work on the farm. The matter of consummating the sale of the farm to him was to be left to the future. Acting on this arrangement plaintiff moved onto the farm in the latter part of February, or March, 1931, and proceeded, with the aid of the Federal government and his son Noble, to plant cotton and corn. The Federal aid consisted of a crop loan upon which Lott seems to have signed a waiver. At the time plaintiff moved onto the farm he knew of the loan against the property, because he assumed and agreed to pay it, according to the terms of his verbal contract of purchase. But he apparently did not know that Lott was in default on the loan held by defendant and that his days as owner were numbered. On the 27th day of May, 1931, defendant insurance company became the purchaser of the property at a foreclosure sale. Plaintiff didn’t know this at the time and confidently went on with making his crops. He testified he first learned that there had been a sale and defendant insurance *664 company was the owner, on the 28th of July, 1931, when Mr. Mange, who was overseer for the insurance company, came down and notified him. At that time they were laying the crop by and cutting hay. Mange not only notified him who owned the land, but brought along a rent note for plaintiff to sign. Plaintiff, however, refused to be reduced from an owner to a tenant in any such manner. He testified: “I didn’t sign-the note and I told him I wouldn’t sign the note for I moved and took possession of the place by buying it and I wasn’t renting.”

Plaintiff must-have been a pretty convincing talker for before Mange left he loaned plaintiff $10 to buy feed and help him along and also assumed an indebtedness for some other feed procured through a Mr. Tuttle. Plaintiff gave a receipt for these advancements amounting in all to $32.30. It was understood at the time that plaintiff was to first pay off the government crop loan and then repay Mange this money out of the crops. This receipt and loan became the 'root of all plaintiff’s future troubles, as will be seen. From then on Mange seems to have become his Nemesis, so to speak. In August Mange came down again and measured up the house, with a carpenter, but there was then no further conversation about who owned the land. Thereafter, plaintiff saw Mange passing back and fourth from time to time but held no conversation with him. Things went along until the early part of 1932, when plaintiff saw Mange again pass near his door, but no word was passed between them. This passing in front of the door must have meant something, for right afterward plaintiff said that Mange brought a lawsuit against him before a Justice of Peace at Essex, twenty-three miles from where plaintiff lived when there was a justice at Bernie onl-y three miles distant. But plaintiff, "went over to the lawsuit,” which was for possession of the land he had bought from. Lott. Mr. Mange was there, Mr. Giles and Mr. Higginbotham were there, the magistrate or-justice of the peace was there, and it seems Mr. Bloodworth, plaintiff’s attorney was also there. This was on January 14, 1932, but the case never ■ went to trial. Plaintiff, through his attorney, and Mange, reached a compromise by which plaintiff was to get his crop off and move within two weeks. Mange claimed no rent, but only required that plaintiff pay what he owed on that receipt, plus the costs in the lawsuit. Plaintiff testified that after he had that two weeks, he started right on loading corn and took one truck load to Butler- County-; that “I was taking it away because I thought it was mine.” Then the real trouble suddenly struck plaintiff without any warning unless the fact that Mange passed by his door twice that morning and saw plaintiff loading corn was a foreboder of the impending calamity. On that same morning, Mange got stuck with his car in a ditch on plaintiff’s place and plaintiff pulled him out. This was a friendly enough act and the last of all friendly relations. *665 Plaintiff and bis son, Noble, started with a second load of corn and had reached a point north of Bernie going to Dexter, when he and Noble were arrested by officer Smith and placed behind the bars in the calaboose at Bernie. Thereafter, the town marshal came with Mr. Mange who talked to plaintiff through the ‘ ‘ grate. ’ ’ Plaintiff testified as to that conversation and subsequent events, as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
73 S.W.2d 815, 228 Mo. App. 661, 1934 Mo. App. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pritchett-v-northwestern-mutual-insurance-moctapp-1934.