Rhine v. Haley

378 S.W.2d 655, 238 Ark. 72, 1964 Ark. LEXIS 537
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 4, 1964
Docket5-3194
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 378 S.W.2d 655 (Rhine v. Haley) 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
Rhine v. Haley, 378 S.W.2d 655, 238 Ark. 72, 1964 Ark. LEXIS 537 (Ark. 1964).

Opinion

Jim Johnson, Associate Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of a client against an attorney on allegations of professional neglect or malpractice. The client, appellee Mildred Haley; retained appellant L. Y. Rhine, an attorney, to represent her in a suit for divorce and a settlement of her property rights. The appellant undertook the employment. A property settlement agreement was drafted and signed and, subsequently, appellee was granted a decree of divorce.

The property settlement bound appellee’s husband to pay appellee and for appellee’s benefit various sums of money totaling approximately $13,000.00, which appellee had advanced to her husband during the years when the parties enjoyed a more amicable relationship. At the time of its execution appellee’s husband, Dr. R. J. Haley, was the owner of several hundred acres of land in Greene and Lawrence Counties. The property settlement provided for no lien or tie on the lands and property of R. J. Haley to secure the amounts which 'he agreed to pay his wife.

Soon after the execution of the property settlement and the rendition of the decree of divorce, Dr. Haley defaulted and failed to make payments in accordance-with the property settlement. Appellee again consulted appellant, with reference to the default and the collection of the amounts due her. While there was strenuous denial on the part of appellant, appellee contended that appellant undertook to collect such amounts.

After a considerable lapse of time, during which Dr. Haley paid relatively little on the obligations due appellee, Haley sold all his real property, took the proceeds and all his personal property and absconded to Louisiana with his new wife. After fruitless efforts to collect from her former husband, appellee instituted the present suit in Greene Circuit Court. A jury trial was requested. Following a lengthy hearing, instructions and argument, the jury returned a verdict in favor of appellee in the sum of $12,898.27. Prom judgment on the verdict appellant prosecutes this appeal.

Appellant has filed a 292 page abstract and brief, urging eleven principal points for reversal. Several of the points are so interrelated as to allow their consolidation.

I.

In points 1, 2, 4 and 5 appellant asserts the trial court erred in the giving of Court’s Instruction No. 6. In each instance appellant contends that one or more features of the instruction were abstract for want of evidence, -and appellant further contends that the entire instruction was abstract in that there was no evidence to go to the jury on any aspect of the instruction. Instruction No. 6 is as follows:

“You are instructed that the plaintiff, Mrs. Haley, bases her right to recover in this action against the defendant, Mr. Bhine, upon two separate and alternative theories and in order to recover she must prove her contentions under either one or both of those theories, as hereinafter set out.
“It is Mrs. Haley’s contention that at or about the time she signed the property settlement agreement, Mr. Bhine was negligent in failing to speak or act in the performance of a duty that he owed to Mrs. Haley with reference to the legal effect and consequences of that document, or that under the circumstances, in violation of a professional obligation, failed to incorporate within the instrument referred to, or in some other instrument, provisions which would effect a lien upon the property of Dr. Haley, and that such failure was a failure to exercise ordinary skill and care in the exercise of his duty. If you find from a preponderance of the evidence that the defendant was negligent in performing his professional duties in these particulars you will find for the plaintiff, and unless you do so find there can be no recovery for the plaintiff under this theory.
“The plaintiff, Mrs. Haley, further contends that even though you may find that Mr. Rhine had discharged his professional obligations to Mrs. Haley with respect to the property settlement and that thereby his contract of employment was terminated by the entry of the divorce decree, that thereafter a contract was entered into by and between her and Mr. Rhine whereby he undertook to collect the indebtedness owing as a result of the property settlement and that he failed to exercise reasonable and ordinary care in effecting this collection. You are instructed that if you find from a preponderance of the evidence that a contract or agreement, either express or implied, was entered into by and between the plaintiff and defendant for the collection of the indebtedness owing by Dr. Haley and further that the defendant failed to exercise ordinary skill and care in effectuating that collection, then and in that event you will return a verdict for the plaintiff, and unless you do so find there can be no recovery for the plaintiff under this theory.”

Was the instruction abstract in any particular?

On appeals from circuit court it is not our function to re-try the case. We have examined the record for the sole purpose of ascertaining whether there was any evidence to sustain the giving of the instruction and support the resulting verdict and judgment. We think this question must be answered in the affirmative.

As indicated, the record is rather bulky and voluminous, and it would serve no useful purpose to detail the evidence at length. Suffice it to say there was ample evidence to justify the submission to the jury of the issues set forth in Instruction No. 6. When viewed in the light most favorable to appellee, as is our duty, there was evidence to show that the appellant was employed to draft the property settlement and procure the decree of divorce. In so drafting the property settlement, the appellant did not incorporate a lien to secure his client in the collection of the amounts due her, nor did he advise the client of the legal effect of her execution of the instrument. In particular, he did not advise the client that by her execution of the agreement in question she was placing it within the power of her husband to follow the very course which he subsequently pursued.

The testimony was adequate to sustain a finding that after appellee’s former husband made default appellant undertook to collect the amounts due her, and that at the time of such undertaking Dr. Haley was in possession of property having a value in excess of the amounts due appellee.' It was undisputed that appellant failed to collect these amounts.

Some of the most outstanding attorneys in northeast Arkansas gave testimony indicating -that appellant’s course of conduct in connection with the employment failed- to measure up to that which an ordinarily careful and prudent practitioner would have employed under the same or similar circumstances. The state of the record being thus, we cannot say that the trial court erred in giving Instruction No. 6 nor that the- verdict and judgment are not supported by the evidence.

II.

Appellant complains that in the course of her testimony and on re-direct examination, appellee was allowed to make a so-called “self-serving declaration,” stating her understanding of the legal meaning and effect of certain portions of the property settlement agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
378 S.W.2d 655, 238 Ark. 72, 1964 Ark. LEXIS 537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rhine-v-haley-ark-1964.