Zeitinger v. Mitchell

244 S.W.2d 91
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 10, 1951
Docket42318
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 244 S.W.2d 91 (Zeitinger v. Mitchell) 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
Zeitinger v. Mitchell, 244 S.W.2d 91 (Mo. 1951).

Opinion

244 S.W.2d 91 (1951)

ZEITINGER
v.
MITCHELL et al.

No. 42318.

Supreme Court of Missouri, Division No. 1.

December 10, 1951.

*92 Frank Mashak, Irwin Walker, St. Louis, for appellant.

James E. Crowe, City Counselor, John P. McCammon, Associate City Counselor, and John J. Shanahan, Asst. City Counselor, all of St. Louis, for respondents.

CONKLING, Presiding Judge.

Ferdinand C. Zeitinger (plaintiff-appellant) appealed from the order of the circuit court sustaining the three motions filed by the various defendants for a directed verdict, entered at the close of plaintiff's evidence, in an action wherein the latter sought $20,000 damages for an alleged false arrest and imprisonment alleged to have occurred in February, 1946. The defendants Mitchell, Siebels and Scism were members *93 of the police force in the city of St. Louis; defendant Schlater was sheriff of Wayne County, Missouri, and defendant Schultz was administrator of the estate of Anna E. Jacobs, which was then in the process of administration in the probate court of Wayne County, and was a resident of that county.

These facts appear. Anna E. Jacobs died in Wayne County on November 20, 1941. Defendant Schultz was appointed administrator of her estate. On January 8, 1943 Schultz, as administrator, filed in the probate court his statutory affidavit stating that Ferdinand C. Zeitinger, a resident of the City of St. Louis, Missouri, had concealed and was wrongfully withholding $608.97, the property of decedent Anna E. Jacobs at the time of her death; that at the time of the filing of the affidavit said money was in the possession of Zeitinger or under his control; and asked that Zeitinger be cited, summoned and compelled to appear in the probate court to answer interrogatories concerning such concealing and wrongful withholding of said money from said estate. Plaintiff Zeitinger was thereupon duly cited and summoned but did not appear in the probate court of Wayne County on January 25, 1943, the day he was cited to appear. The probate court thereupon issued its order and writ of attachment to the Wayne County sheriff. Upon that writ plaintiff was brought before said probate court of Wayne County. Interrogatories were filed in the matter and upon the trial in the probate court of the issues made by such interrogatories and the answers thereto, in which testimony was heard thereon, there was a finding against the administrator.

The administrator thereupon appealed to the circuit court of Wayne County and upon the trial there de novo on April 5, 1944, the jury found "Fred C. Zeitinger guilty of wrongfully withholding the sum of $608.97 of money belonging to the estate of Anna E. Jacobs, deceased." Judgment was thereupon entered that Fred C. Zeitinger was wrongfully withholding said money; "and was withholding said money at the date of the filing of the complaint and the citation in the probate court of Wayne County, Missouri, on which the proceedings herein are based, therefore the Court finds that said Fred C. Zeitinger, was so wrongfully withholding and is now wrongfully withholding said money in said sum, which was the property of Anna E. Jacobs, deceased"; and therein ordered Zeitinger to forthwith pay to the administrator said money so wrongfully withheld from the estate. Thereupon Zeitinger duly appealed to the Springfield Court of Appeals. On June 26, 1945, that appellate court affirmed the judgment of the Wayne County circuit court. See In re Jacobs' Estate (Schultz v. Zeitinger), 238 Mo.App. 833, 188 S.W.2d 956. After the mandate of the Court of Appeals was filed in the circuit court, the latter court filed its transcript, certificate, mandate and judgment in the Wayne County probate court that Zeitinger was guilty of wrongfully withholding said money from said estate. Upon that mandate the probate court duly entered its findings and order that Zeitinger deliver such money, the property of said estate, to the administrator Schultz. But Zeitinger nonetheless thereafter continued to wrongfully withhold said money from said estate.

Thereafter, on February 4, 1946, the matter regularly came on again for hearing in the probate court of Wayne County, upon complaint that Zeitinger had not paid to the estate the $608.97, and thereafter that court entered therein its judgment and order, and thereupon issued its attachment and commitment, fully reciting in both its judgment and commitment in detail all the various steps, required findings and circumstances. After finding in that judgment that Zeitinger was still wrongfully withholding the money, and that he was therefore in contempt under what is now Section 462.430, references are to RSMo 1949, unless otherwise specified, it was ordered therein that attachment and commitment issue, and that plaintiff be committed to the common jail of Wayne County until such contempt was purged by the payment of the sum so wrongfully withheld, and costs. Neither that judgment nor that commitment are here attacked.

Plaintiff's instant petition charged that on February 7, 1946, he was unlawfully *94 arrested in St. Louis upon the above mentioned attachment and commitment of the probate court, and through the action of the defendant St. Louis police officers Mitchell, Siebels and Scism, and the defendant sheriff Schlater, and was transported by Schlater to Wayne County and there placed in jail. Thereafter on February 9, 1946, plaintiff purged the contempt by the payment of the money adjudged to have been wrongfully withheld from the Anna E. Jacobs Estate, and the costs. Plaintiff instantly alleges that his arrest and confinement in jail in February, 1946, after the adjudication of contempt and upon the above order of attachment and commitment issued by the Wayne County probate court, was unlawful.

In the instant case plaintiff, in part, testified:

"Q. Mr. Zeitinger, when Anna E. Jacobs died, did you have in your possession any money that had been given you by her? A. Yes, I did.

"Q. How much did you have? A. I think I had the sum of $3,606.00 in my possession at the time of her death.

"Q. That was in money, in cash, was it? A. In cash, yes, sir.

"Q. Where did you have that? A. In a safe deposit box * * *

"Q. Now, did you collect any money for Mrs. Jacobs or Mrs. Jacobs' estate after she died? A. I collected a mortgage from Gieselman.

"Q. What was the amount of that? A. I think it was in the nature of around $2800.

"Q. Now, tell us what became—that was in money, too, was it? A. That was in cash, too.

"Q. And what did you do with that? A. That and $3,000, I sent a cashier's check to Walter Schultz, a cashier's check for around $5800.00.

"Q. What did you do with this $2800 from the Gieselman note immediately after you got it? A. I immediately got a cashier's check and took the $3,000 and sent that to Walter Schultz.

"Q. Did you do that immediately upon receipt of the $2800? A. Practically so, yes.

"Q. Now, you say the $3,606.36, is that what that was? A. That is right.

"Q. That was money that you had received in cash? * * *

"Q. And after you sent this cashier's check to Mr. Schultz, how much remained in your possession in cash money? A. Six hundred and some dollars and a few cents.

"Q. Would you say it was $608.97? A. I think it was that amount."

With respect to the circumstances under which he finally turned that $608.97 over to the estate, after he had been committed to jail in Wayne County, plaintiff testified:

"Q. Did he give you a blank check? A.

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Bluebook (online)
244 S.W.2d 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zeitinger-v-mitchell-mo-1951.