136 Mo. App. 719 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1909
This is a suit to enforce the collection of an attorney’s fee under the Act of 1901 providing for a lien for the services of attorneys and counselors at law. The plaintiff, an attorney, brought suit
The plaintiff in his petition alleges that Mrs. Landers made a contract with him by which he was to receive for his services a sum equal to one half of the amount to be recovered by judgment or compromise, and this suit is to enforce his statutory lien under said contract.
The defendant answered, denying that plaintiff had any such contract of employment, and alleged that the plaintiff represented to the defendant that he and Ebenezar Landers had been Grand Army Comrades and because of that fact he would not charge the widow anything for his services; and, relying upon that representation, defendant settled with Mrs. Landers by its promise to pay her $1,100; that, learning such settlement had been made, plaintiff fraudulently induced Mrs. Landers to execute a contract by which he was to receive for his services a sum equal to one half of the amount she recovered on her claim by judgment or compromise, and that said contract was obtained by plaintiff with the fraudulent intent of extorting from defendant the amount sued for in the case.
The uncontradicted evidence in the case establishes the following facts, viz., that plaintiff at the instance of Mrs. Landers brought the suit mentioned and after-wards brought into the case the services of Dolman & Brown, a firm of lawyers engaged in their profession at St. Joseph where the suit was instituted; that prior to plaintiff’s appearance in the controversy John F. Tyler had been retained by Mrs. Landers to bring her suit, the compensation for whose services was to be one-third of the amount she might succeed in recovering; that plaintiff induced Mrs. Landers to revoke her authority to Tyler to bring the suit and to employ him for that purpose.
The defendant’s evidence tended to show that when plaintiff undertook Mrs. Landers’s case he led her to believe that he would not charge her for his services because the deceased husband and he had been members of the same lodge of the Grand Army of the Republic. But plaintiff’s evidence tends to show that such was not the case although at the time of the employment nothing was said as to what compensation he should receive for bis services.
The defendant offered a demurrer to plaintiff’s case, which was refused, and the court gave a peremptory instruction to the jury to return a verdict for the plaintiff. The jury returned their verdict accordingly. From the judgment rendered, the defendant appealed.
We are of the opinion it was immaterial whether or not plaintiff agreed at the time of his employment he would not charge Mrs. Landers for his services in her behalf, as the writing mentioned fixing his compensa
The defendant answers the conclusion by denying the premises — that is to say, that the compromise made with Mrs. Landers was an accord and satisfaction. But was it such?
“Accord and satisfaction is a method of discharge of a contract or cause of action arising either in contract or tort, consisting in the substitution of an agreement between the parties in satisfaction of such contract or cause of action and an execution of that agreement.
“An accord in order to discharge a contract or cause of action must be executed, and this execution of the accord is the satisfaction. Satisfaction consists in the actual performance by one party of the agreement of accord, and the acceptance by the other party of such performance in full satisfaction of the original cause of action or contract.” [Am. and Eng. Ency. of Law, 408, 420-1.]
The defendant’s contention is that in such cases, notwithstanding the rule presupposes that one party accepts the performance of the other’s promise or agreement, and not the promise or agreement itself, it is well settled that, if the accord, and not the performance thereof, is accepted in satisfaction of the demand and the agreement to accept is based upon a sufficient consideration, the demand is extinguished and cannot be the foundation of a new action. We believe such to be the law, and it is illustrated in Goodrich v. Stanley, 24 Conn. 613; Jennings v. City of Ft. Worth, 26 S. W.
But no case that we have examined holds other than that there must be' performance of the accord in some manner and the cases, to which reference has been made, only illustrate the different ways in which performance may be accomplished. It is useless to multiply cases.
The agreement in this case was that the plaintiff, in consideration of the payment of $1,100 in a few days by the defendant, would settle her suit then pending, wherein she claimed $10,000 as damages for the death of her husband occasioned by the alleged neglect of the defendant. It does not appear that she accepted the agreement or promise to pay the sum mentioned as a satisfaction of her claim. The terms of the settlement do not bear such a construction. On the contrary, it is clear that the accord was made with the implied understanding, which the law gave to it, that satisfaction was to follow by payment. The pleading of the accord for payment of the sum agreed upon would not have been a bar to the further prosecution of plaintiff’s action. It was not a question of intention, but one of construction; and, such being the case, it was the duty of the court to declare its legal effect. The cause was properly tried.
Affirmed.