CHARLES P. NOELL v. MISSOURI PACIFIC RAILROAD COMPANY, a Corporation, Appellant.
Division One
July 17, 1934.
74 S. W. (2d) 7
PER CURIAM: - The foregoing opinion by COOLEY, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur, except Ellison, P. J., absent.
Defendant‘s answer alleges many matters, which in the view we take of the case are now immaterial; but states the following defenses upon which it now principally relies, namely:
First: “The attempt of the plaintiff‘s petition to extend a lien granted by a Missouri statute to a cause of action arising in Arkansas, and not merely to the Missouri recovery therein, if any, is an attempt to cause the Missouri statute to operate beyond the boundaries of the State, and is a denial of due process of law, contrary to Section 30 of Article II of the Constitution of the State, as well as Amendment V and Section 1 of Amendment XIV of the Constitution of the United States.”
Second: “The said Anna L. Hobbs, as administratrix of the estate of the said W. S. Hobbs, through Pace & Davis, a firm of lawyers residing and practicing in the State of Arkansas, brought her action against this defendant in the Circuit Court for the Western District of Lawrence County, a court of record of general and superior common-law jurisdiction, to recover damages for the death of the said W. S. Hobbs, and being the same alleged cause of action as previously instituted by the plaintiff herein, as attorney for the said Anna L. Hobbs as such administratrix, against this defendant in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis; personal service was had upon this defendant in accordance with the Arkansas law in the action so instituted in the Circuit Court for the Western District of Lawrence County; and, as in duty bound, this defendant answered in due course, pleading both to the merits and also the pendency of the prior action for the same cause in Missouri. In due course, and on March 9, 1927, there was a trial of the said cause and verdict and judgment of said Arkansas court for the plaintiff and against this defendant for the sum of $17,500. Thereupon Pace & Davis, plaintiff‘s attorneys in said cause, filed and presented to said Court in said cause a petition, asserting a lien upon the said recovery, under the law of Arkansas, and asking an order of said Court directing this defendant to pay said entire recovery to the clerk of the said court; and upon consid-
Third: “The said Pace & Davis began their action in the Chancery Court for the Western District of Lawrence County in the State of Arkansas, a court of record of general and superior equity jurisdiction, against this defendant and the said Anna L. Hobbs, as administratrix of W. S. Hobbs, in which they asserted a lien under the law of Arkansas upon the above-described judgment of recovery of the said Anna L. Hobbs as such administratrix against this defendant; and process was served upon the said Anna L. Hobbs and this defendant.
“And on March 25, 1927, this defendant, as required by law, filed its answer in said cause, and also its cross-complaint, naming the plaintiff herein as a defendant thereto, and asking that his claim of a lien upon said recovery be investigated, and the defendant be protected from the possibility of being required to pay said judgment, or any part thereof, more than once.
“The plaintiff herein then resided in the State of Missouri and could not be personally served in the State of Arkansas. A summons was issued for said plaintiff, and, with a copy of the original complaint and the cross-complaint duly certified by the clerk and under the seal of said court, was served on the plaintiff. . . .
“The said Chancery Court entered its order directing this defendant to pay said sum so recovered against this defendant by Anna L. Hobbs, as administratrix as aforesaid, to the clerk of said court, to be dealt with as said Court might afterwards order and direct.
“And thereupon this defendant, in obedience to the order and direction of said Circuit Court of March 9, 1927, and of said Chancery Court of April 11, 1927, paid said sum to O. T. Massey, Clerk of said Circuit and Chancery Courts.
“The above-entitled cause so pending in the Chancery Court for the Western District of Lawrence County came on to be heard and finally determined by said Court, which then and there entered its judgment and decree adjudging that the contract pleaded by the plaintiff as made by him with Anna L. Hobbs, as administratrix of W. S. Hobbs, be canceled and set aside, and that the plaintiff herein was without interest in, lien upon, or right to the recovery aforesaid of said Anna L. Hobbs as such administratrix against this defendant, so paid into court by this defendant, or any part thereof. And said judgment has ever since remained, and now is, in full force
Plaintiff‘s reply, also, made many allegations now immaterial, but the facts stated in defendant‘s answer concerning the proceedings in Arkansas were shown by duly certified copies of the records of said courts and there is no controversy about them. They are, in fact, admitted in plaintiff‘s reply. Plaintiff alleged a conspiracy against him but there is no evidence whatever that defendant had anything to do with plaintiff‘s client‘s attempt to discharge him, her employment of Arkansas attorneys, or the commencement of a new suit in that state against defendant. We will, therefore, start with the situation as it existed when the Arkansas case was set for trial.
Plaintiff‘s claim, stated in his reply, is that when the damage suit was heard in Lawrence County, Arkansas, there was no actual contest but that a settlement was reached on the morning the case was set for trial. Concerning this trial, it is conceded that defendant admitted liability under the
Plaintiff‘s position as to the proceedings in the chancery court subsequent to the judgment, as stated in his reply, is that said court could not by service of summons upon him outside the State of Arkansas obtain jurisdiction over him or “the power to adjudicate the question of the validity of plaintiff‘s contract of employment with said Anna L. Hobbs, as administratrix as aforesaid, or the validity
Defendant assigns as error the refusal of its declarations of law in the nature of demurrer to the evidence, and other declarations of law which if given would make necessary the direction of a verdict for defendant. The constitutional questions raised by the pleadings are the basis of our jurisdiction. Plaintiff has filed a motion to dismiss the appeal on the grounds of insufficient statement of facts and failure to properly state points and authorities. Since the only question here is whether, upon the evidence, plaintiff was entitled to recover, we consider defendant‘s brief sufficient and the motion to dismiss defendant‘s appeal is overruled.
Prior to the adoption of our attorney‘s lien statute (Laws 1901, p. 46) an attorney, who was wrongfully discharged or who was not paid for his services, “had no remedy except the ancient one of a suit on the contract against his client.” [Wait v. A., T. & S. F. Railroad Co., 204 Mo. 491, 103 S. W. 60; Young v. Renshaw, 102 Mo. App. 173, 76 S. W. 701, and cases cited.] Attorneys had no lien upon judgments which they recovered except that if they received their clients’ money, they could, of course, “retain their fees, just as any other bailee may retain for services rendered in the care of the subject of the bailment,” but the defendant was not under duty to pay the judgment to the attorneys merely because he had knowledge “that the plaintiffs are indebted to them for fees in the cause.” [Frissell v. Haile, 18 Mo. 18.] Our Act of 1901, now
“The compensation of an attorney or counselor for his services is governed by agreement, express or implied, which is not restrained by law. From the commencement of an action or the service of an answer containing a counterclaim, the attorney who appears for a party has a lien upon his client‘s cause of action or counterclaim, which attaches to a verdict, report, decision or judgment in his client‘s favor, and the proceeds thereof in whosesoever hands they may come; and cannot be affected by any settlement between the parties before or after judgment.”
The second section of the act (
After a judgment is obtained in a suit, the cause of action is
