Sidney Smith, Inc. v. Steinberg

316 S.W.2d 243, 1958 Mo. App. LEXIS 512
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 10, 1958
DocketNo. 7670
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 316 S.W.2d 243 (Sidney Smith, Inc. v. Steinberg) 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
Sidney Smith, Inc. v. Steinberg, 316 S.W.2d 243, 1958 Mo. App. LEXIS 512 (Mo. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

McDowell, judge.

This is an action in replevin filed in the Circuit Court of Pemiscot County, August 19, 1949, to recover 74 cases of cigarettes of the value of $5,183.68, property of the Steele Sales Company.

In 1945, Maurice D. Plough and Henry Loeb, II., residents of Memphis, Tennes[245]*245see, were co-partners engaged in the tobacco business under the firm name of the Memphis Tobacco Company; on that date they established a tobacco business in Steele, Missouri, under the firm name of the Steele Sales Company to engage in the sale of tobacco in interstate business through the U. S. mail. They entered into a written contract of employment with defendant, Simon Steinberg, as manager of the Steele Sales Company. Under the terms of this contract defendant was to receive a salary of $50 a week and a bonus of one-third of the net profits. August 17, 1949, the business closed, defendant’s employment was terminated and a sale of the goods to plaintiff by the owners, Loeb and Plough, was consummated. Plaintiff, the purchaser, demanded possession of the stock of goods from defendant, which was refused. Plaintiff filed this action.

Defendant’s answer and counterclaim to the replevin action claimed a lien on the stock of goods replevied for an unpaid balance of net profits due him under his contract of employment with Loeb and Plough as manager of the Steele Sales Company and that Loeb and Plough were the real parties in interest.

The cause was tried and judgment rendered for plaintiff. On appeal from the trial court’s judgment to this court the judgment was reversed and remanded. See Sidney Smith, Inc., v. Steinberg, Mo. App., 280 S.W.2d 696.

In the opinion of the court of appeals it was held that defendant was entitled to an equitable lien on the property replev-ied for any unpaid balance of net profits earned by Steele Sales Company under the contract of employment between Loeb and Plough and defendant and directed an accounting to determine the unpaid balance of such net profits, if any, due defendant.

On retrial of the cause the parties stipulated that the replevin issue need not be retried; that plaintiff should have judgment subject to the defendant’s equitable lien for the amount of the net profits, if any, found due from Loeb and Plough to the defendant. At the close of the testimony defendant abandoned his claim for net profits for the period from December 1, 1947, to November 30, 1948, and limited his claim to the period from December 1, 1948, to August 17, 1949.

In the early part of January, 1949, an investigation was instigated by the U. S. Postal Department and Louisiana State Tax authorities concerning the sale of cigarettes by Steele Sales Company to one, Anguzza, of Louisiana; that on March 17, 1949, an indictment was returned in the Federal District Court in New Orleans, Louisiana, against defendant, Loeb, Plough and Anguzza. Loeb and Plough paid, by checks drawn on the Steele Sales Company, the sum of $15,000 attorney fees and $2,297.03 expenses to Thomas L. Robinson and L. E. Gwinn, lawyers of Memphis, for representing defendant, Loeb and Plough in the investigation of the alleged crime and for the preparation of their defense. The total amount of attorney fees and costs so paid amounted to $17,297.03, which, when deducted from the earnings of the Steele Sales Company, left nothing due defendant under his contract of employment. The trial court found that if these two items were disallowed as items of expense of the Steele Sales Company, the net profits of the business from December 1, 1948, to' August 17, 1949, would be $9,804.92, of which the defendant would have been entitled to one-third or $3,268.31, less $500 fine paid by said partners for defendant, (which defendant agreed should be deducted,) would leave a net of $2,768.31 due defendant.

We agree with respondent’s statement in its brief that the “only substantial issue on this appeal is whether or not L. E. Gwinn and Thomas L. Robinson were employed to represent defendant Steinberg, along with Plough and Loeb, in a mail fraud indictment instituted in the Federal Court in New Orleans, and whether or [246]*246not the fee and expenses in the defense of that case were a proper charge against the Steele Sales Company.”

Defendant, in his brief, adds to this issue an additional issue that the attorney fee and expenses were excessive and exorbitant.

The evidence determinative of the issues involved is conflicting and confusing. Plaintiff’s evidence consisted of written and oral testimony. Thomas L. Robinson, lawyer and member of the firm of Robinson & Robinson, Memphis, Tennessee, testified that his first connection with the criminal case was in the early part of 1949 when he was called by Loeb and informed that the Steele Sales Company was being investigated and that the postal authorities and tax agents of Louisiana were either in the office of the Memphis Tobacco Company or at Steele and desired to examine the records. He testified that he advised Loeb, as attorney for the Steele Sales Company, not to permit such examination; that when he returned to Memphis he communicated with defendant and requested him to bring all the books and records, including correspondence passing between seller and purchaser; that a conference was held in his office with defendant, Loeb and Plough; that from time to time thereafter, defendant and his wife brought other correspondence to his office for examination; that on one occasion defendant called him from Steele and said the agents were there and at the bank and wanted to know what to do; that he advised defendant to inform such agents to make known what records they desired and he would cooperate. January 24, 1949, a historical statement, consisting of 43 pages, was taken from defendant concerning himself and the conduct of the business of the Steele Sales Company, in which he stated he told the investigating agents at Steele he had to consult his lawyer in Memphis and that, later, he said, “My lawyer instructed me if there was any information you desire regarding the case, * * * contact him.” Witness testified he had conferences with defendant at his office, both day and night, relative to this investigation; that attorney Gwinn was consulted in the matter prior to the returning of the indictment and from time to time as the investigation was progressing. He said it was apparent that postal authorities and tax agents of Louisiana were quite persistent in their investigation and said “We felt something was going to happen. We conferred with Mr. Gwinn.” He stated what he meant by “we” was that defendant, Loeb, Plough, and possibly defendant’s wife, were present at conferences with Gwinn. He stated the indictment raised a question of first impression. He testified:

“Q. Was there ever a fixed amount to be paid by the defendants, or those who later became defendants, to the attorneys who represented them in this case?” In answer to this question witness said he had represented the Steele Sales Company prior to this and then answered “After the indictment, yes”.

The preliminaries leading up to the trial of the cause were performed by attorneys Robinson and Gwinn; the appearance of the defendant before the Federal Grand Jury, the making of bond, and the arraignment, admittedly, were arranged by Mr. Robinson for all of the defendants, excepting Anguzza.

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Bluebook (online)
316 S.W.2d 243, 1958 Mo. App. LEXIS 512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sidney-smith-inc-v-steinberg-moctapp-1958.