Copyright oggbashan November 2021 Edited December 2021
The author asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.
This is a work of fiction. The events described here are imaginary; the settings and characters are fictitious and are not intended to represent specific places or living persons.
The action takes place a few days after my 2019 story Police Gazette: Goodwill to Men and includes some of the same characters. This story stands alone. You do not have to read the other story first.
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I am Jonas Pritt, senior partner in the solicitors' practice of Pritt and Stephens, based in the sleepy town of Needham Market in the mid-19th century. Our work is mainly about land transactions, sales, purchases and leases of land in the surrounding area.
It was the first day our office was open after the Christmas and New Year break. I was enjoying my mid-morning cup of tea when the practice clerk knocked at my office door and entered.
"Yes, Mr Owens?" I asked.
"Mr James Smithers has called. He would like to see you urgently. He seems upset and possibly a little drunk."
"OK, Mr Owens. Send him in."
Mr Smithers is one of my regular clients. He is a major local landowner but doesn't farm. He lives on the rent from leasing out his lands to local farmers and buying and selling houses, locally and in Bury St Edmunds. He pays the practice several hundreds of guineas a year. He is possibly our most profitable client, so humouring him, even if he is slightly drunk, might be worthwhile.
Mr Owens showed Mr Smithers in and went to fetch another cup of tea. I sat back in my chair.
"What can I do for you today, James?" I asked.
"I am embarrassed, Jonas," Mr Smithers admitted. "I want to bring a claim for non-delivery of a contract, but the agreement was only verbal."
"You do not need to be embarrassed. Anything said in this office is confidential..."
Mr Owens brought in the cup of tea. Mr Smithers drank it quickly.
"As you know, Jonas, I am a widower."
I nodded.
"On Christmas Eve I had been drinking with the squire and other local notables. The squire had just had a delivery of several cases of wine and wanted our opinion. We sampled, possibly too much. I must have drunk the equivalent of two bottles of wine. As I left, I was feeling sad and lonely and missing my wife. I thought of Beccles Betty..."
Beccles Betty is the town's best known and most used prostitute. She doesn't advertise her services, nor does she need to walk the streets. Her customers usually visit her at her home. Disputes with Betty are rare because Betty would beat up any man who refused to pay her. Beccles Betty is a large and muscular woman. Personally, I don't see the attraction, but I am happily married to the wife I love.
"And?" I prompted.
"Betty didn't have any customers on Christmas Eve. I agreed to pay her three guineas for the rest of the night, but..."
"But?"
"I was too drunk to perform, even by the morning. I had wasted three guineas for nothing."
"So, what do you want me to do, James?"
"I want to get my three guineas back from Betty."
"There are several problems with that, James. The first is that asking me to pursue Betty would cost you far more than three guineas. The second? If there was a contract, and since it was verbal, it is your word against hers, so you might not win. The third? If I accept your version of the contract, it was your inability to perform that was the issue. Betty was willing to honour the agreement. You couldn't. That is your fault not hers."
"Your costs don't matter, Jonas. It is the principle. I paid three guineas for nothing..."
"Principle? If you want me to argue for a principle, my costs will double. A normal case against Betty would cost twenty-five guineas. A case for a principle? Fifty guineas at its lowest."
"Ouch! So, you are suggesting I don't proceed?"
"I haven't said that but yes. You would be wasting your money and wouldn't win with any sensible judge. Why do you want to proceed against Betty anyway? Three guineas are nothing to you."
"I suppose it is pride. When I left, I said some things to Betty I shouldn't have. I threatened to sue her for the three guineas, and she responded that non-performance was my fault and she had solicitors too..."
"She does. We act for her sometimes..."
"So, there would be a conflict of interest?"
"Unlikely. Betty is represented by one of our juniors."
"What do you suggest I do, Jonas?"
"What you ought to do, but I don't recommend it because you might make things worse face to face, is apologise to Betty and forget it. Instead, I think you ought to drop any idea of suing Betty. You'd lose and face substantial costs not to mention embarrassment. Your threat of suing her is nonsense. We need to make clear to Betty that you won't. That will cost you because I or one of our juniors will have to contact her and calm her down. The easiest way is to pay her off..."
"Pay her off? On top of the three guineas?"
"Yes, because any other course would cost you far more and if the case becomes public property, you would be a laughingstock. Betty NEVER speaks about her clients but a case against her would reveal what you did and didn't do."
"OK, reluctantly, I suppose. And your bill as well? How much?"