State Ex Rel. Bradley v. Trimble

289 S.W. 922, 316 Mo. 97, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 521
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 20, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 289 S.W. 922 (State Ex Rel. Bradley v. Trimble) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Bradley v. Trimble, 289 S.W. 922, 316 Mo. 97, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 521 (Mo. 1926).

Opinions

This is a proceeding by relators, who are practicing lawyers in Johnson County, Missouri, by certiorari, to quash the record of the Kansas City Court of Appeals in a case recently pending and determined in said court.

Their petition alleges that on September 6, 1923, they filed in the Circuit Court of Johnson County aforesaid a petition in an action for damages, signed by Nick M. Bradley and E.C. Littlefield, as attorneys for Joseph Smith, plaintiff, against Frank C. Nicholson et al., defendants; that service upon defendants was had, and the cause *Page 100 set down for hearing for the October term, 1923, of said court; that all the defendants answered at said term; that relators conducted all the proceedings, and made all appearances for the plaintiff in said cause, and finally obtained judgment against Frank C. Nicholson, one of the defendants, in the sum of five hundred dollars, on the 24th day of November, 1924. That on November 13, 1924, R.M. Robertson, a practicing lawyer of Johnson County aforesaid, served written notice upon Frank C. Nicholson, to the effect that he had been employed by said Joseph Smith, the plaintiff, and that he claimed a lien on the judgment; that on December 10, 1924, said Frank C. Nicholson filed in said cause a petition asking that said relators, R.M. Robertson and Joseph Smith, the plaintiff, be required to interplead for the proceeds of the judgment; that relators, and said Robertson, filed interpleas in said cause; that relators demurred to the interplea of Robertson, which was overruled, and the cause proceeded to a trial upon said interpleas of Robertson, Smith and relators; that the latter offered in evidence the original petition filed by them, and a written contract signed by plaintiff, authorizing them to file the suit and agreeing to allow them one-half of the amount recovered; that they offered evidence tending to show that they had conducted all the proceedings leading up to the judgment, at the request, and under the contract of plaintiff; that there was no conflict as to the above facts; that R.M. Robertson introduced evidence to the effect that he had been employed by plaintiff in May, 1923, to file said suit; that he did not file the suit himself, but employed relator, E.C. Littlefield, to prepare the petition and to send it to Warrensburg for filing; that Robertson, over the objection of relators, introduced in evidence his ledger, containing a memorandum of the contract between him and plaintiff Smith; that on the 1st day of the October term of said circuit court, he asked the circuit judge to enter his name on the bar docket as attorney for plaintiff; that the circuit court rendered judgment sustaining a lien in favor of R.M. Robertson for $250, and refused to sustain any lien in favor of relators; that the remaining $25 was awarded to attorneys for Frank C. Nicholson as their fees in the interplea action; that motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment were filed, overruled and the case appealed to the Kansas City Court of Appeals, where the judgment was affirmed as shown by "Exhibit A;" that a motion for rehearing was filed in the Court of Appeals, overruled, and the writ ofcertiorari issued herein.

In order to avoid repetition, we will consider the questions presented by the record in the opinion.

Before coming to the merits of this controversy, we deem it expedient to dispose of some of the law questions presented by the record. *Page 101

I. The Court of Appeals properly held that on the record before it, the case should be disposed of as an equitable proceeding, in which said court had the legal right to pass uponEquitable the weight of the evidence disclosed by the record.Proceeding. [Bush v. Kansas City Life Ins. Co., 214 S.W. 178, and cases cited.]

II. The Court of Appeals had jurisdiction over the subject-matter of the action and likewise over the parties connected therewith.Certiorari.

In State ex rel. v. Allen, 256 S.W. l.c. 1052, we said: "As long as said court promulgated no rule of law which could be said to conflict with a former ruling of this court on the same or similar facts, it had the inherent right to determine the issues involved, whether its rulings be right, or wrong."

To the same effect, are the following authorities: State ex rel. v. Daues, 285 S.W. 480; State ex rel. Calhoun v. Reynolds,289 Mo. 514 to 518, 233 S.W. 483 and fol.; State ex rel. Packing Co. v. Reynolds, 287 Mo. 697, 230 S.W. 642.

III. The Court of Appeals in its opinion gave a general outline of the case before it, up to the time of theInterplea: trial in the circuit court. The opinion thenAttorney recites that:Fee: Conflict.

"The cause was tried on January 3, 1925, a jury being impaneled by the court to assist in determining certain questions of fact, as follows:

"`First. Did plaintiff Joseph Smith employ as his attorney in his claim against Nicholson and others, Mr. R.M. Robertson, if so, did said Robertson render service to Mr. Smith?

"`Second. If Mr. Smith so employed Mr. Robertson and he rendered services accordingly, then did Mr. Robertson employ Mr. E.C. Littlefield to assist as attorney in the case?

"`Third. Did Mr. Smith, the plaintiff, employ Mr. E.C. Littlefield in the case independently of any employment through Mr. Robertson?'

"Objection to the action of the court in submitting said questions of fact to the jury was made by Littlefield and Bradley, upon the ground that whether Robertson employed Littlefield to assist him is not an issue in the case. The objection was overruled.

"At the close of the testimony, the jury returned their verdict and finding of fact as follows: That Joseph Smith employed attorney R.M. Robertson and agreed to give him one-half of any proceeds recovered in the suit in question; that Joseph Smith employed R.M. Robertson on a contingent fee of one-half the amount recovered, and that thereafter attorney Robertson employed attorney Littlefield. *Page 102 Upon this finding, the court entered of record the following judgment:

"`Wherefore the court adjudges that the lien of R.M. Robertson for $250 of said $500 judgment be and is established; that defendant Frank C. Nicholson pay to said R.M. Robertson said sum of $250; that interpleaders Littlefield and Bradley recover nothing herein; that defendant Nicholson pay to said Smith the sum of $250, and all costs in said cause, except costs connected with this interplea; that said Littlefield pay all costs of said interplea; that defendant be allowed an attorney's fee of $25, and that on account of the jury having found that plaintiff Smith did not testify correctly as to his employment of attorney Robertson, said $25 fee is to be deducted from the said $250 to be paid said plaintiff.'"

The opinion then recites that the motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment filed by Littlefield and Bradley were overruled and they appealed to said court. The opinion likewise sets out the evidence of interpleaders Littlefield and Bradley offered in the trial court to sustain their plea relating to an attorney's fee claimed to be due them. It likewise sets out the evidence in the trial court tending to show the prior employment of Robertson by Smith on May 22, 1923, anterior to the alleged employment of Littlefield and Bradley, and tending to show, that Robertson was entitled to an attorney's lien for his fee and employed Littlefield to assist him.

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Bluebook (online)
289 S.W. 922, 316 Mo. 97, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-bradley-v-trimble-mo-1926.