Terminal Railroad Assn. v. Schmidt

163 S.W.2d 772, 349 Mo. 890, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 418
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 17, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 163 S.W.2d 772 (Terminal Railroad Assn. v. Schmidt) 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
Terminal Railroad Assn. v. Schmidt, 163 S.W.2d 772, 349 Mo. 890, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 418 (Mo. 1942).

Opinions

This is a suit in equity to set aside and to enjoin, for alleged fraud in its procurement, the collection of a judgment for $40,000, damages awarded Ernest W. Aly in an action at law against Terminal Railroad Association of St. Louis, a corporation. The Terminal Railroad Association of St. Louis (designated Terminal hereafter) is the plaintiff and John J. Schmidt, executor of the estate of Ernest W. Aly, deceased, Charles P. Noell, an attorney who represented Aly in the damage suit, and Josefina Amerigo Aly, Aly's widow, are the defendants here. The chancellor found for the defendants, dismissed plaintiff's bill, and plaintiff has appealed.

Early Friday morning January 13, 1939, Aly shot and killed himself. Mr. Mothershead, the funeral director, found four sealed, stamped, and addressed envelopes near Mr. Aly's body. The letters were in Aly's handwriting, signed by him, and dated January 12, 1939. The envelopes were [773] addressed to Paul Aly, Mr. Noell, Mr. E.J. Johnson, and Mr. James Perry. The latter two were employees of the Terminal. Mr. Mothershead took the body and the letters with him. Aly made no requests and left no directions with respect to the letters; but, receiving instructions from the Coroner, Mr. Mothershead mailed the letters. The Johnson and Perry envelopes contained two letters each, the other two letters being addressed to attorneys for the Terminal. The letters addressed to the Terminal employees were of the same import. The letter to Mr. Johnson *Page 898 read: "Your Co. does not owe me any thing on my case as it was faked fixed and framed."

The letter to Paul Aly, so far as deemed material, read: "Keep away from courts and all lawyers and you will be money ahead. . . . Bro please look after poor Old Mother as I have been a burden on her the last nine years. Bro try to live a straight life and you will be better off than I." We detail the facts leading up to the writing of the letters and Aly's suicide hereinafter.

The case of Aly v. Terminal Railroad Association was tried three times. Aly was injured October 25, 1929. He was at the time forty-two years of age and was engaged in the performance of his duties in interstate commerce in the yards at St. Louis for the Terminal as switch foreman. The switch engine was backing, drawing three cars, at about ten miles per hour, approaching Aly, and when he attempted to board the footboard of the tank, he, according to his testimony, was caused to fall by reason of the footboard slipping sideways — towards the coupler — about an inch, with the result that both of his legs were cut off above the knees. Aly sued in January, 1930, grounding his action for damages on the Terminal's alleged violation of the Federal Boiler Inspection Act, 45 U.S.C.A., sec. 22 et seq. The first trial resulted in a verdict for the Terminal on April 28, 1931. Upon appeal, the judgment was reversed and the cause remanded. [See Aly v. Terminal Rd. Assn., 336 Mo. 340, 78 S.W.2d 851.] The second trial resulted in a verdict for Aly for $55,000 on April 26, 1935. The trial court was of opinion the verdict was excessive and ordered a remittitur of $25,000. This, Aly refused to comply with, and a new trial was awarded the Terminal. The third trial resulted in a verdict of $85,000 for Aly on January 8, 1936. This judgment was affirmed on May 3, 1938, on condition of Aly entering a remittitur of $45,000 (which he did), and a rehearing was denied August 17, 1938. [See Aly v. Terminal Rd. Assn., 342 Mo. 1116, 119 S.W.2d 363.] Thereafter, on December 19, 1938, the United States Supreme Court denied the Terminal's petition for certiorari. [See Terminal Rd. Assn. v. Aly,305 U.S. 655.] The hotly contested and real factual issue in these trials was whether the footboard shifted or slipped sideways about an inch. The charge of fraud in the procurement of the judgment in the Terminal's bill in the instant case is to the effect that Aly's unsupported testimony that the footboard moved or shifted was false and fraudulent; that Aly concealed said fact and prevented the Terminal presenting said defense as an issue in his case; that the Terminal could not have discovered said fraud by the highest exercise of care, and had no information Aly's said case had been faked, fixed, and framed until the receipt by employees of the Terminal, after Aly's death, of letters from Aly stating his case was "faked, fixed, and framed." The records, including the evidence, of the first and third trials of Aly *Page 899 v. Terminal Rd. Ass'n are preserved in the instant bill of exceptions. On the issue there was evidence pro and con. Notwithstanding the Terminal's assertions of error in this court and in its petition for certiorari to the United States Supreme Court that there was no substantial evidence the footboard shifted to the side, the determinations of the courts on the law involved and the juries on the facts were contra. The evidence on this issue is narrated in the opinions of this court and is not repeated here.

In addition to a renewal of its contention of the improbability that the footboard shifted sideways as Aly testified in his lawsuit, the Terminal argues that Aly would not have written the letters stating that his case had been faked, fixed, and framed immediately before committing suicide, and written his brother advising him he would be money ahead if he kept away from all courts and lawyers and would be better off than Aly if he lived a straight life, if his case had not been faked, fixed, and framed; or Aly's lawyer would not have said to one of the Terminal's lawyers that if he ever had another case involving a footboard, it would not move sideways if the case had not been faked, fixed, and [774] framed. Defendants argue that it was for the jury, as held, whether the footboard shifted as Aly testified; that the letters were the result of Aly's intense dislike for his wife and not the result of a desire to right a wrong brought on by qualms of his conscience; and, in any event, the Terminal had failed to establish its case beyond a reasonable doubt. This, on the issue of the credibility of the witnesses and the weight and value of the evidence without entering upon a discussion of certain legal principles involved, concerning which we make no observations.

[1] The burden was on the Terminal to establish the fraud charged to have been practiced upon it and the court in the procurement of the judgment by evidence so clear, strong, and cogent as to leave no room for reasonable doubt of its existence in the mind of the chancellor. Lieber v. Lieber (Banc),239 Mo. 1, 31(a), 143 S.W. 458, 467(a); Elliott v. McCormick,323 Mo. 263, 274, 19 S.W.2d 654, 658[1], citing cases. Merely substantial evidence is insufficient. State ex rel. v. Shain,344 Mo. 891, 897, 129 S.W.2d 1048, 1051 [7, 10].

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163 S.W.2d 772, 349 Mo. 890, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/terminal-railroad-assn-v-schmidt-mo-1942.