Rogers v. Nee

186 S.W. 566, 194 Mo. App. 163, 1916 Mo. App. LEXIS 192
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 26, 1916
StatusPublished

This text of 186 S.W. 566 (Rogers v. Nee) 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
Rogers v. Nee, 186 S.W. 566, 194 Mo. App. 163, 1916 Mo. App. LEXIS 192 (Mo. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

ROBERTSON, P. J.

Plaintiff by this suit seeks to recover from defendants, who are lawyers residing in Springfield, one hundred and fifty dollars which they collected from him as part payment pf a charge for professional services rendered him. The trial court directed a verdict for defendants, plaintiff took an involuntary nonsuit, with leave to move to set the same aside, and after taking the proper steps and obtaining no relief he has appealed.

The plaintiff was working in a stone quarry near Springfield when his' hand was caught in some unguarded machinery and severely and permanently injured. The owner of the quarry carried liability insurance and that company took charge of the defense against that claim and has charge of this suit. The insurance company offered plaintiff fifty dollars in settlement of his claim. He refused to accept the offer, employed defendants and entered into a written contract agreeing to pay them fifty per cent of the amount collected. as the result of a suit brought. No written [165]*165notice was served by the attorneys and no suit was brought. Soon after defendants were employed by plaintiff the insurance company’s offer of -settlement .was raised to three hundred dollars. A report was made by an employee of the insurance company to it of the accident and of the negotiations for settlement in which he stated: “I can see no defense whatever against this man’s claim.” In that report it was stated plaintiff was insisting on one thousand dollars,, and a payment of five hundred dollars was recommended.

Negotiations were carried on a short time between the defendants and the insurance company, but no settlement being effected the insurance company settled direct with plaintiff for five hundred dollars, retaining fifty dollars for defendants and fifty dollars for a doctor who had treated plaintiff’s injuries received in the accident. A representative of the insurance company told one of defendants, in response to the statement that they had served no written notice of their lien, that no settlement would bé made with plaintiff without said defendant being present. As soon- as defendants heard about the settlement they called on the insurance company and learned the details and were paid the fifty dollars.. They also learned where plaintiff had deposited a portion of the proceeds of the settlement in a bank and they sued him, obtained an attachment and had the bank served with a garnishment summons. At the same time they sent a request to plaintiff to call at their office, which he did. He says defendants told him they had not received the fifty dollars from the insurance company and that they noticed he had violated the law to a great extent in collecting their money and depositing it in the bank in his name. Plaintiff told defendants that they had agreed to accept a nominal fee if he settled his claim without a suit, and there is testimony tending to prove that fact. He says one of the defendants was wanting two hundred dollars more, but finally wrote a check on the bank for one hundred and fifty dollars and told bim to sign it as they had his money tied, up in the bank and that was the only way he could get it loose. He [166]*166said lie “didn’t know what to do, only to sign the check for $150.” After he signed it defendants told him, he says, that they had received the fifty dollars from the insurance company. The suit of defendants against him was dismissed and the money released, and thereafter the insurance company took charge of him for the purposes of this suit.

Whatever may be thought- of the size of defendants’ per centage of recovery in the event of a suit, as provided for in their contract, it,is clear that the services they rendered pending the negotiations for settlement were worth several hundred dollars to plaintiff. He was faring much better with them than he did in charge of the insurance company without them.

That plaintiff owed the defendants a reasonable fee for their services is unquestionable, as their written contract provided in terms for a fee after suit was brought, and the payment of the fifty dollars to defendants by the• insurance company was not .a full settlement of their claim, if their services were worth more, even though the receipt to the insurance company when it was paid so receipted, as it was not a compromise or paid or received, as between plaintiff and defendants, as such. The plaintiff and the insurance company concluded between themselves that fifty dollars would be a reasonable amount to pay defendants, but the amount was not left by plaintiff with' it to be paid only in the event defendants would accept it in full payment of their fee and that was not made a condition of its payment. The plaintiff made no claim that the payment to defendants of the fifty dollars constituted a settlement, even after he was advised of its payment to them, as he testified to, immediately following the signing of the check for one hundred and fifty dollars.

This case in the last analysis comes to the sole question as- to whether the payment of the one hundred and fifty dollars was made by plaintiff under duress, for if it was not and he paid the defendants that additional amount believing he justly owed it he could not recover it back. Even though defendants had said that in the event of a settlement they would [167]*167charge only a nominal fee, yet they had a right to reasonable compensation for their services and if plaintiff voluntarily paid the amount within the meaning of the law he cannot recover it back. The plaintiff did leave with the insurance company more than a nominal fee and no doubt he left what he was advised would be a reasonable one, so when this amount was left he was trying to deal fairly with his attorneys and would have done so, doubtless, but for the insurance company. The plaintiff had a right to change his mind after he got away from the influence of the insurance company and pay defendants what he may have been convinced was right. We are not unmindful of the rules as to the regard that must be given the testimony where a verdict has been directed.

We understand the rule to be that mere seizure of the property of another by legal process on an honest claim does not constitute duress for that is a matter than can be fought out in the pending litigation. [Wolf v. Marshal, 52 Mo. 167, 170 and 171.] Whether it should be held that the defendants in the case at bar settled their claim in full when they accepted fifty dollars was a matter of defense and when they had taken a different view of the matter and sued plaintiff for an additional amount using in aid thereof the attachment proceeding, the real amount due became a disputed and litigated claim which the parties might compromise and settle, and if this was done, such settlement would he binding in the absence of fraud or duress.

It is said the general rule once existing as to what constitutes a compulsory payment is not so strictly applied as formerly and that now few general principles are applied, but each case is decided on its own facts, according to justice and fair dealing may be promoted. [American Brewing Co. v. City of St. Louis, 187 Mo. 267, 377, 86 S. W. 129.] In the case at bar the plaintiff had deposited only' three hundred dollars of his money in the bank and there is no evidence that he was in immediate need of any of it when defendants sued and attached. Something is said in the brief filed [168]*168here in. behalf of plaintiff about exempt property being levied on, citing Kelley v. Osborn, 86 Mo. App.

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Related

Curtis v. Metropolitan Street Railway Co.
94 S.W. 762 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1906)
Wolfe v. Marshal
52 Mo. 167 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1873)
Finck v. Schneider Granite Co.
86 S.W. 213 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1905)
American Brewing Co. v. City of St. Louis
86 S.W. 129 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1905)
Kelley v. Osborn
86 Mo. App. 239 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1900)
Brown v. Worthington
142 S.W. 1082 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1912)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
186 S.W. 566, 194 Mo. App. 163, 1916 Mo. App. LEXIS 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-v-nee-moctapp-1916.