84 Mo. 225 | Mo. | 1884
Margaret Harlowe sued Levi L. Ketchum in the Monroe circuit court for $20,000 damages for breach of promise -of marriage. After a change of venue and two continuances, the action came to trial in the Shelby circuit court in April, 1880, and the plaintiff recovered judgment for $5,000. To restrain the collection of this judgment and set it aside, and for a trial anew upon the merits, Ketchum in May, 1880, began this suit, in equity. The petition charges that appellant employed and paid an attorney to defend for him in the original suit and informed him of the facts and witnesses material to his defence. That he did not attend court when the casé was tried because his attorney told him it would not then be for trial, and that he need not attend; that the case stood on demurrer to plaintiff’s petition, and, after the demurrer should be disposed of, the case must go over to the next term. He alleged.that he never agreed
The answer denied all the allegations of the petition, and alleged that appellant had no defence to the •original action. That he had agreed to marry the plaintiff therein. That appellant’s attorney made the best defence that could have been made, and that the judgment was fairly obtained.
The cause was taken by change of venue to the Moberly court of common pleas, and at the conclusion of the trial there the court dismissed the bill and gave judgment for costs against Ketchum and he appealed. On the trial appellant introduced in evidence the record of proceedings in the original suit, audit was admitted that the cause was docketed for trial on April 6, 1880 ; that it was tried on April 8th, and that court adjourned April 13th. He, also, read in evidence the depositions of a number of persons, including four of the jurors who tried the cause, and a sheriff and a deputy sheriff. Objections were noted at the time the depositions were taken, especially to the jurors testifying about their impressions and beliefs ; but objection seems not to have been urged in court and appellant has full benefit of this evidence. One juror did not appear to have a vivid recollection of the events of the trial, but the others agreed with the sheriff and deputy sheriff that the evidence was all on one side, and the trial short. These three jurors, too, expressed the opinion that the case was well defended, and all made out of it.
Appellant detailed his employment of Col. Theo. Brace to defend the suit of Miss Harlowe against him. That he visited Col. Brace the Saturday before court be
He said his attorney told him he was not fixing for trial, but if he should have to go into trial he could put the judgment down to one dollar and costs. To the question if he did not tell his attorney he would not submit to cross-examination, he answered, “Not if my memory serves me right.” When asked if he told his attorney what he could prove by the witnesses he named, he an
Dora Rose testified that appellant told her he was engaged to Miss Harlowe, and invited her to live with them when they were married. Geo. C. Brown, the Monroe circuit clerk, testified that on the day of appellant’s marriage to his present wife, he asked witness to see Miss Harlowe and try to pacify her mind as to the disappointment. In another conversation appellant told witness he had engaged to marry Miss Harlowe on January 10th, the day he was married to the other lady. That she wanted him to build a certain expensive kind of house, to which he objected ; and in consequence of her business she was not willing to marry him as soon' as he wanted to marry, and because of the disagreement on this question the engagement was broken off.
Theodore Brace testified that he informed appellant that he had no confidence in his demurrer, and that the case would be for trial and told when it was set on the docket. That appellant asked if he could be cross-examined about his pecuniary affairs, and he told Mm he thought he could. That he asked appellant if he had found any witnesses, by whom anything could be proved favorable to him, and appellant said he'had not. That he had previously informed appellant as to his exemptions.' That appellant told him there was one matter not yet fixed, but that he could fix it in three or four days if he could have that much time. That he told appellant he would have that much time before judgment could be rendered. That appellant said he would do better to at
B. F. Dobyns testified that he was assisting Col. Brace a»s local counsel, and was present at the trial though he took no part in it. In his judgment Brace made a skilful defence.
It is argued that appellant's counsel was guilty of gross negligence in the management of his client’s cause, and possible fraud on the part of the attorney is hinted, also. And, again, that there surely was a misunderstanding between client and attorney, by which the client was deprived of the opportunity to defend against defeat and excessive recovery. Ketchum, and not Miss Harlowe, would properly be responsible for the gross neglect of Ketchum’s attorney, as well as for the results following from a misunderstanding between Ketchum and his attorney. Had the original und ertaking of Ketchum to marry Miss Harlowe been complied with, she might, to some extent, and under some circumstances have become a quasi-guarantor for her spouse. But in an action founded on Ketchum’s alleged failure to fulfill his contract with her, Ave could hardly hold the lady as a guarantor of his attorney’s diligence or his oavii understanding. The evidence shows that the attorney Avas not incompetent, negligent or untrue, but the reverse. We would be con
It is enough to add in reference to the alleged errors in the admission and in the exclusion of evidence, that if all appellant’s objections had been sustained, and he had. proved all he offered to prove about his attorney’s alleged insolvency, still the court would have committed no error in dismissing Ms bill. Of such oases as this, one in a pigeon hole is worth two in court. I think the judgment should be affirmed,