54 Mo. App. 66 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1893
— The plaintiff sued defendant for $2,500 on account of personal injuries received while a passenger in one of its cable street cars. She made application to sue as a poor person. Afterwards she
I. It is now insisted that the court erred in entering judgment for costs against plaintiff in dismissing her suit without first having passed upon her application to sue as a poor person. It is enough to say of this objection that it is not one of the reasons stated in the motion, and will, therefore, not be considered. Motions addressed to the trial court should be specific; and no reason not “'specified shall be urged in support of the motion.” Revised Statutes, 1889, sec. 2085.
II. We are relieved of the necessity of passing upon any question of fraud alleged to have been practiced upon plaintiff from the-following consideration: It is conceded that in the settlement she received from defendant the sum of $125 in money as a consideration for -the settlement. She has not returned or offered to return this sum. Such return or offer to return is a prerequisite to her right to annul the contract of settlement and to sue upon the original cause. This principle was fully discussed in Cahn v. Reid, 18 Mo. App. 115, and has found frequent expression in a variety of cases in both the .courts of appeals and the supreme
But it is frequently said that a contract absolutely void need not be rescinded, as there is nothing to rescind. And in srich cases it is frequently held that there need be no offer to restore the status quo in order to sue on the original cause of action. This is the natural result, perhaps, in those jurisdictions which hold such contracts absolutely void. Such was the case of Railroad v. Lewis, 109 Ill. 120. The contract of settlement of personal injury in that case was said to have been executed when the party was wholly incapacitated by pain resulting from the injury. In the case at bar there can be no question that the contract of settlement was merely voidable at the election of plaintiff, and not void. She executed it and can elect to stand by it or disaffirm it. If the latter, she'must restore what she received under it. This phase of the case was fully discussed in Cahn v. Reid, supra. See also the recent ease of Taylor v. Short, 107 Mo. 384.
But it is said that one is not bound to restore to the other party to the contract what he has received under it when the other party is indebted to him in a larger amount; that in such case the sum compromised upon is at least due and need not be returned. This rule can, however, have no application in a case where all liability is denied as is the case before us. The question has been directly passed upon in cases of the character we have here. Girard v. Car Wheel Co., 46 Mo. App. 116; Railroad v. Hayes, 83 Ga. 558; Home Ins. Co. v. Howard, 111 Ind. 544; Gould v. Cayuga Nat. Bank, 86 N. Y. 75.
III. The remaining reason specified in the motion is that the settlement was in violation of the rights of plaintiff's attorneys, of which defendant had notice.
“Know all men by these presents that I, Hattie Alexander, have made, constituted and appointed, and do by all these presents hereby make, constitute and appoint "W. J. Hollis and S. E. Oheeseman my true and lawful attorneys, sole and absolute, with all the powers, privileges and authority incident thereto, to prosecute, negotiate, settle or compromise for me and in my name, place and stead a certain claim for personal damages, viz: Being thrown from a car at Flora avenue and Fifteenth streets, on the Grand Avenue Railway Com..pany road, July 31, 1892, by the-carelessness of the servants of said company; that I do grant and give exclusive power to my said attorneys to institute and prosecute such suits and actions and 'accept such terms, amounts and conditions in compromise or settlement as in his judgment is best, right and proper in defense of my rights in these premises. That I do furthermore hereby give and grant to my said attorneys full and sole power and authority to do and perform all and every act and thing whatsoever requisite to be done in and about the premises as fully and to- intent and purposes as I might or could do if personally present at the doing thereof, to receive and receipt for all and any money or property received or recovered on account of or by these premises. That for said services of said attorney one half of whatever judgment, compromise or settlement" may ultimately be effected shall be retained by my said attorney in full and complete settlement for their services in these premises.” (Duly signed).
“To the Grand Avenue Railway Company: Take notice:
“That Hattie Alexander has employed the undersigned as attorneys to prosecute a suit against you for*73 damages for injuries claimed to have been sustained by her on the thirty-first day of July, 1892, at Kansas City, Missouri, by reason of the negligence of your servants in starting a car, in which she was a passenger, before she could alight. That said attorneys, for their services in said cause, have taken an interest in whatever judgment or compromise may be obtained. That said attorneys have the exclusive power to make any compromise they deem best for their client and themselves in the premises.” (Duly signed).
The claim to which these papers refer must have for its foundation either a lien in favor of the attorneys or an assignment of a part of the claim. That an attorney has no lien for his services, on a judgment obtained by him was long since determined in this state. Frissell v. Haile, 18 Mo. 18; Roberts v. Nelson, 22 Mo. App. 28. And it could scarcely be pretended that an attorney, merely as such, would have a lien on the claim before it became a judgment in the absence of a statute conferring such a lien, as the attorney can have no lien on the suit. Parker v. Blighton, 32 Mich. 266; Coughlin v. Railroad, 72 N. Y. 448; Henchey v. Chicago, 41 Ill. 136. Though there seems to have been a rule or practice adopted arbitrarily by some of the courts enforcing such liens. The court said in the foregoing case from New York, that “the courts invented this practice and assumed this extraordinary power to defeat attempts to cheat the attorneys out of their costs.” But, asstatedin that case and in the case cited from 18 Mo., attorneys’ fees in those jurisdictions were “fixed sums, easily determined by taxation,” and this power was exercised to secure them their fees.
But there is a suggestion of assignment of the cause of action. This is met by the statement that no actions are assignable save those which may survive (Snider v. Railroad, 86 Mo. 613), and that this action is
But if it be suggested that the agreement between plaintiff and her attorneys amounted to an equitable-assignment of a portion of the claim such suggestion is met by the fact that this claim is an unliquidated one; from its nature indefinite and indeterminable except by the agreement of the parties or the verdict of a jury. More than this, all liability is denied by the defendant. “The debt or fund as to which such an equitable assignment can be made must be some recognized or definite fund or debt in the hands of a person who admits the obligation to pay the assignor; or at least it-must be some liquidated demand capable of being enforced ib. a court of justice. We apprehend that the doctrine has never been held that a claim of no fixed amount nor time or mode of payment — a claim which has never received the assent of the person against.
It follows that the circuit court was right in overruling the motion to reinstate the cause, and its action will be affirmed.