Weir ex rel. Weir v. Kickbush

353 S.W.2d 627, 1962 Mo. LEXIS 788
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 8, 1962
DocketNo. 48642
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 353 S.W.2d 627 (Weir ex rel. Weir v. Kickbush) 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
Weir ex rel. Weir v. Kickbush, 353 S.W.2d 627, 1962 Mo. LEXIS 788 (Mo. 1962).

Opinion

LEEDY, Judge.

Action in three counts by Charles E. Weir, a minor, by his guardian, Virgil P. Weir, as plaintiff, against Hattie Louise Kickbush (the defendant in the minor’s prior action wherein he was awarded judgment for $6,000 for personal injuries), State Farm Mutual Insurance Company, her insurance carrier, and Cedric Siegfried, the minor’s attorney in the prior action. Under Count I plaintiff sought to set aside the $6,000 judgment in his favor in the former action; Count II alternatively sought to set aside the purported satisfaction of the judgment just mentioned; and by Count III plaintiff sought to recover $50,000 damages on his original cause of action for personal injuries sustained as the result of having been struck by Mrs. Kickbush’s car through her negligence while driving the same.

The court ordered that Counts I and II be severed from Count III for the purposes of trial, and that separate trial be first held on Counts I and II, and that there be no trial with respect to Count III until a final determination of Counts I and II be made. Trial proceeded on Counts I and II as thus ordered, at the conclusion of which the court made findings of fact and gave conclusions of law, and in conformity therewith entered judgment in favor of Mrs. Kickbush and against plaintiff with respect to Count I, and also entered judgment in favor of all the defendants and against plaintiff with respect to Count II; and further ordering “that the judgments herein rendered on said Counts I and II be separate and final judgments for the purpose of appeal within the meaning of Section 512.020, Missouri Revised Statutes 1949, and Rule 3.29 [now numbered 82.06], Rules of the Supreme Court.”

After an unavailing motion for a new trial, plaintiff appealed. Through error, his appeal came here originally, but, lacking jurisdiction, this court transferred it to the Kansas City Court of Appeals, where the action of the trial court was affirmed. 340 S.W.2d 422. We ordered transfer, under Art. V, § 10, Const, of Mo., V.A.M.S., on application of plaintiff, so the cause is now before us as if the appeal had been direct from the trial court. New or supplemental briefs have been filed in each appellate tribunal successively, so that, on the present submission, their number totals eleven, and they contain in the aggregate more than 300 pages, but our task is less formidable than would be indicated by this array because, in the view we take, the first question is the determinative one, and for that reason we do not reach the others.

The minor’s prior action was a proceeding in the Circuit Court of Jackson County at Independence. It was commenced and prosecuted by the next friend duly appointed for him in such suit, his father, Charles H. Weir. It was filed February 9, 1954, and styled “Charles Earl Weir, a minor, by his father and next friend, Charles H. Weir, plaintiff vs. Hattie Louise Kickbush, defendant, No. 116-441.” The petition alleged that on January 6, 1954, plaintiff suffered the grievous and severe bodily injuries therein enumerated while walking across 23rd Street at or near Hawthorn Street in Independence as a result of being struck by an automobile allegedly being operated in a negligent manner by the defendant, and praying damages in the sum of $50,000. The petition was signed by Cedric Siegfried as attorney for plaintiff.

The next entry after the filing of the case was an order made April 9, 1954, by which the defendant’s motion for a more definite statement with respect to paragraphs 2 and 3 of the petition was sus-[629]*629fained, and the plaintiff granted leave to file an amended petition within 20 days; but no amended petition was ever filed. Such was the state of the record on August 30, 1954, when the judgment now challenged was rendered. It consisted of two parts, the first of which was a regular judgment entry reciting the coming on of -the cause for trial, the appearances of the parties, waiver of jury, and that “the court having heard the evidence and being fully advised in the premises, finds the issues herein in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant and assesses plaintiff’s damages at the sum of $6,000.00”; wherefore it was ordered and adjudged that plaintiff have and recover of and from the defendant said sum together with costs, etc., which judgment was then and there satisfied in open court by the defendant paying unto the next friend “and his attorney of record, Cedric Siegfried,” the sum of $6,-000, and the next friend’s acknowledgement thereof. The second part (immediately following) recites the fact of the foregoing trial, the rendition of judgment for plaintiff for $6,000, and satisfaction thereof in open court, then orders, adjudges and decrees that “Cedric Siegfried ⅛ * * receive into his hands as trustee for the benefit and use of the plaintiff * * the said sum of $6,000.00 from the defendant herein, and out of said proceeds to first pay and discharge” his own attorney’s fee [not fixed in amount] “and thereafter proceed as quickly as possible to pay and ■discharge the medical bills and fees due for treatment of said minor plaintiff, and thereafter with any overplus or sums remaining of said $6,000.00 to pay the same over into the hands of a Guardian and Curator under appointment by the Probate •Court of Jackson County, Missouri, or •other court of competent jurisdiction, if .any, under subsequent orders.”

Siegfried, purporting to act as trustee under the foregoing order of appointment, disbursed the proceeds of the $6,000 judgment in this way: 40% thereof to himself as and for an attorney fee, $2400; $1494 in payment of medical, hospital and nursing expenses (reduced by compromise and settlement from approximately $2500); $30 for filing fee incident to the opening of the minor’s guardianship in the probate court, and for premium on bond of the guardian, Virgil P. Weir. These disbursements aggregate $3924, leaving a balance of $2076. On November 8, 1954, Siegfried delivered his check for that amount to the guardian, who, in writing, acknowledged receipt of the check, and approved the trustee’s accounting and its accuracy. (This check was never cashed, but at the beginning of the trial was tendered back, which tender was refused.) On May 13, 1955, Siegfried filed in the circuit court in said cause an instrument styled “Report of Trustee concerning Minor’s funds” (reflecting disbursements as above stated), which the court approved on that date, but four days later, on May 17, 1955, said court, on its own motion, set aside the order entered May 13 approving said report.

On September 2, 1954 Virgil P. Weir, the grandfather, was duly appointed as the minor’s guardian upon application therefor prepared by Siegfried and signed by the grandfather on August 31, 1954 (the day after the rendition of the judgment). As the result of the guardian’s dissatisfaction with the amount of the judgment, and the minor fraction of the proceeds thereof tendered him as the share of his ward, the institution of the present action was authorized by the probate court on May 10, 1955, and on July 14, 1955, it was filed in the Circuit Court of Jackson County at Kansas City, where, as previously indicated, it eventuated adversely to plaintiff.

The guardian’s first attack upon the validity of the prior judgment (as made below and preserved for appellate review) is that challenging the jurisdiction of the Independence court to render the particular judgment entered. That such court had jurisdiction of both subject matter and of the parties is not disputed, nor is the fact that the judgment itself (apart from the [630]

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Bluebook (online)
353 S.W.2d 627, 1962 Mo. LEXIS 788, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weir-ex-rel-weir-v-kickbush-mo-1962.