Parker v. Harrison

146 Mo. App. 329 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1910

COX, J.

This case originated in the probate court of Phelps county upon an account filed by plaintiff against defendant for one-half of attorneys’ fees and expenses paid by deceased Parker. Said attorneys’ fees and expenses alleged to have been received by deceased' James B. Harrison in his lifetime and one-half of which was due deceased Parker. On trial in probate court the account was disallowed, plaintiff appealed to the circuit court where the case was tried before a jury and a verdict returned in favor of defendant, and plaintiff has appealed to this court.

It is admitted that L. P. Parker is deceased and that H. H. Parker is his administrator and that J. B. Harrison is deceased and that Ada Harrison is his administratrix. The evidence on the part of plaintiff tends to show that in the lifetime of L. P. Parker and J. B. Harrison they were engaged as counsel for Sarah H. Sally who was interpleader in a great number of attachment suits against her husband, J. B. Sally; that the litigation of these cases continued for a number of years and finally resulted in a judgment in favor of the interpleader, Sarah H. Sally, and the collection of a large sum of money by deceased Harrison, and it further tends to show that Mrs. Sally had specifically directed Harrison to pay deceased L. P. Parker $1350 *331out of money then in his hands. There was no evidence by either plaintiff or defendant tending to show whether or not this money had been paid to Parker. At the close of the testimony the court gave instructions to the jury which placed the burden of proof upon the plaintiff to show' that the deceased Harrison had not paid to Parker the money which he had received and had been directed by Mrs. Sally to pay to Parker. There is but one question to decide in this case, and that is ■where the burden of proof rested. There seemed to be no contention that the money received by Harrison came from the litigation in which Harrison and Parker were attorneys for Mrs. Sally, and that Mrs. Sally directed Harrison to pay Parker $1350 of this money, and there is no question but that this was for attorneys’ fees and money advanced by Parker during the progress of the litigation.

There can be no question but that in the trial of a case either for money had and received or for debt, and the plaintiff can show that the defendant received the money for the plaintiff or that defendant was indebted to the plaintiff this makes a prima-facie case for the plaintiff and casts the burden of proof upon the defendant of showing that the money or the debt as the case may be had been paid to plaintiff. [State ex rel. Weaver v. Weaver, 92 Mo. 673, 4 S. W. 697; State to the use v. Richardson, 29 Mo. App. 595; Carder v. Primm, 52 Mo. App. 102,]

Under this rule when it wns shown in this case that deceased Harrison had in his hands $1350 which he was directed to pay to Parker, the plaintiff in this case made a prima-facie case and the burden of proof was not upon the plaintiff to show that the money had not been paid; but if defendant washed to defend upon the ground that it had been paid the burden was upon him to prove the payment as in any other case where payment is relied upon as a defense. The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.

All concur.
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