Wassell v. Armstrong

35 Ark. 247
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 15, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 35 Ark. 247 (Wassell v. Armstrong) 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
Wassell v. Armstrong, 35 Ark. 247 (Ark. 1880).

Opinion

Turner, S. J.

This is a suit.in equity, originally brought by Lucy H. Carroll, as administratrix of the estate of George ~W. Carroll, deceased, against the defendant, John Wassell. She alleges in the bill that her intestate, who died in the year 1868, at the time of his death owned a large amount of cotton, exceeding one thousand bales, which, after his death, was seized by the army of the United States during the military occupation of the country by the federal troops in the year 1863, and converted to the use-of the government.

That about the time of her appointment as administratrix of said estate, in July, 1865, the defendant, a practicing lawyer, came to "her, representing that he had acquired valuable information in regard to the seizure of said cotton, whereby he would be enabled to recover the value thereof from the United States government, and solicited plaintiff to employ him as her attorney to collect the same, and she, having confidence in the integrity and good faith of the defendant, was induced to place the claim in his hands for collection, upon an agreement that he would collect the same for a commission of 10 per cent, upon the amount collected, the expenses attending the collection to be borne by the plaintiff; and thereupon the defendant took charge of the claim and instituted suit for the recovery thereof in the United States court of claims.

That she,being old and infirm, and wholly inexperienced in matters of business, soon yielded the entire management of the estate to the defendant, relying upon him entirely to adopt such measures and procure such orders as were necessary, and which he frequently did, without previous consultation with her, and without her knowledge or consent. So that during nearly the entire time of her administration of the estate, the defendant has had and exei’cised entire control and management of the same, on account of ber confidence reposed in him, she believing that he would honestly and efficiently manage the same.

The plaintiff further alleges that some time after the former contract between plaintiff' and defendant about the collection of the cotton claim against the government, the defendant represented to her that there was so much difficulty and expense, doubt and uncertainty about the successful prosecution of the claim, that the fee agreed upon between them was not sufficient, and greatly magnified the trouble and expense which he had already had, and the expense he would still have to incur, and the plaintiff then consented to an arrangement whereby the defendant should pay all expenses, costs, etc., about prosecuting the claim, and if he recovered the amount from the government he was to pay the plaintiff for her dower, or one-third, twenty thousand dollars, and the remainder of the claim to be divided equally between the estate of the said George W. Carroll and the defendant; and’that in making the calculation that there would be twenty thousand dollars coming to plaintiff'in her individual capacity as dower, it was understood that her third would be about fifty dollars per bale.

The plaintiff further alleges that the defendant, some time in the year 1872, succeeded in collecting on said cotton claim from the government of the United States, the sum of ninety-six thousand dollars ($96,000), the adjudged value of three hundred and forty-seven bales of said cotton, and that on the twenty-seventh of October,-1872, he filed in the probate court of Conway county a report of his proceedings as her attorney in the premises, in which he falsely and fraudulently claims the right, under certain pretended agreements stated to have been made on the twenty-third of March and the fifteenth of April, 1868, and long after he had been retained in said cause, to retain as his fee for collecting the claim, the entire amount collected except the meagre sum of fifty dollars per bale, amounting to seventeen thousand three hundred and fifty dollars, which he proposes, in said report, to pay over to plaintiff, and refuses to account for the residue of money so collected on said claim.

- That at the same time tne defendant, in connection with said report, filed an account-current in plaintiffs name as administrator of said estate, and at the ensuing January term of the probate court of Conway county, procured an order to be made confirming said settlement, which she alleges was made and said order procured by the defendant, without any knowledge or information on her part, and with the fraudulent intent of giving to his illegal exaction the authority of judicial sanction, and thus secure, himself from the consequences of the fraud practiced upon the plaintiff and the beueficiaries of the estate. Copies of the report and settlement are exhibited with the bill.

The plaintiff further alleges, that.the defendant, on the fifteenth of April, 1868, meditating the fraud he is attempting to practice upon her, and wishing to clothe with legal authority any contract into which he might be able to inveigle her, procured an order of said probate court authorizing her to employ an attorney to collect the said claim, upon such terms as she might deem proper; and after a lapse of four years, and after the collection of the claim, he procured an-order of the said court confirming the appointment of the defendant prior to the date of s tid order, further authorizing the defendant to prosecute all demands in favor of said estate. Copies of these orders are exhibited with the bill. That defendant pretends that she entered into a contract with him, by which it was agreed that he should pay all expenses .incurred in the collection of said cotton” claim, and retain for his fee all that he should collect thereon in excess of .fifty d dlars per bale, to be paid her as administratrix of the estate, and the further sum of ten dollars per bale, to be paid her in her individual right.

That said pretense is utterly false; and the pretended agreements referred to in said report, and which were intended to be legalized by.the order referred,to and exhibited with the bill, if, in fact, they exist, were forged by the defendant, or she was inveigled by his fraud and deceit, into signing them, without any knowledge of the true character and meaning of their contents.

Plaintiff prays that said last mentioned contract be set aside, and the first mentioned contract between the parties in regard to said cotton claim be enforced, and that defendant be allowed only 10 per cent, commission on the amount collected.

That he be required to produce into court the pretended contracts referred to in. exhibit “Bthat the same, and the illegal orders fraudulently obtained by him in the Conway probate court, in reference thereto, be set aside, and he be required to account and pay over to the plaintiff all the money collected by him from the United States on said claim, less 10 per cent, commission of the same.

That defendant be required to make a complete statement of all his dealings with said estate, and that he account for all sums of money belonging to said estate, in his hands, unaccounted for.

The defendant filed his answer on the nineteenth of October, 1874.

Admitting that the said George W.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Sayre v. Whetherholt
107 S.E. 293 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1921)
St. John v. Lofland
64 N.W. 930 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1895)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 Ark. 247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wassell-v-armstrong-ark-1880.