Bailey v. Griggs

1935 OK 785, 49 P.2d 695, 174 Okla. 90, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 1373
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 17, 1935
DocketNo. 25397.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1935 OK 785 (Bailey v. Griggs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bailey v. Griggs, 1935 OK 785, 49 P.2d 695, 174 Okla. 90, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 1373 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

*91 GIBSON, J.

Franklin H. Griggs commenced an action in the district court of Tulsa county against Patent and TradeMark Protection Company, a corporation, to recover an attorney fee for legal services rendered said company in connection with the prosecution of a suit in the federal court. A certain debtor of sa'id defendant corporation was garnisheed by Griggs, the result of which was the depositing of a fund with the court clerk sufficient to pay the judgment sought. Thereafter, Frederick W. Bailey, an attorney, filed his petition of intervention in said action seeking to establish his interest in one-half the fee sought by Griggs and asked judgment against Griggs for that amount.

In the .meantime Noah Weinstein was appointed trustee in bankruptcy for the defendant corporation and has become a party by intervention. Judgment for $4,000 was entered for Griggs against the defendant, and holding that the trustee in bankruptcy had not established his claim to the fund garnished, and it was further adjudged that the evidence on the part of Frederick W. Bailey was insufficient to sustain his petition in 'intervention.

From this judgment the intervener, Frederick W. Bailey, and the trustee have taken separate appeals. The only matter considered on this appeal is Bailey’s claim to one-half the judgment sought and obtained by Griggs, and his alleged right to participate equally with Griggs 'in the fund impounded under the garnishment proceedings.

Bailey will be referred to herein as plaintiff, and Griggs as defendant.

The alleged facts on the part of plaintiff are substantially as follows:

That he is an attorney at law, engaged in the active practice; that he was employed by defendant corporation to prosecute a suit in the United States District Court for the Western District of Arkansas; that in pursuance of said employment he instituted said suit and thereafter employed, and associated with him, the defendant as associate counsel In said cause; that in all subsequent proceedings the defendant appeared as associate counsel, and that the services for which plaintiff was employed, and in connection with which he associated with him the defendant, have been fully performed.

It is further alleged that the defendant instituted the action against the defendant corporation without his knowledge and did at the same time attach the funds in question so as to enable the same to be applied in satisfaction of sa'id attorney’s fees. It is further alleged that defendant repeatedly promised plaintiff to make him a party plaintiff in the action for the purpose tlof obtaining' a joint recovery of the fees sued for, but that the defendant failed to keep said promise. Plaintiff asked that he be adjudged to have an equal interest with the defendant in the recovery of attorney’s fees sued for and that he have an equal right with defendant in the funds garnished, and that the judgment against defendant company be a joint judgment In favor of plaintiff and defendant, or that in the event defendant recovered, plaintiff have judgment over and against him for one-half the amount thereof, to be satisfied ratably with defendant out of the funds held under garnishment.

Defendant alleged that plaintiff was employed as agent for the defendant company and acted as such in connection with the suit in federal court; that the plaintiff attempted to Institute said suit in a federal court in the state of Arkansas prior to his admission to practice in that court for the purposes of that litigation, and, acting as agent for defendant company, he employed the defendant to conduct said litigation. Plaintiff’s evidence disclosed that he had been a member of the Oklahoma State Bar for nearly 19 years and that he had practiced in the federal courts of Oklahoma and various other states.

The theory upon which the plaintiff presented his intervening petition was a ratification of the action by Griggs for the fees earned by both of them in the suit in federal court and to participate equally with Griggs in the recovery. Nothing was sought by him against the defendant company or its trustee except the right to participate in the recovery of Griggs.

The facts concerning the activities of the plaintiff and defendant in connection with the litigation in the federal court are virtually undisputed. The evidence clearly reveals that they were in close association at every stage of the proceedings. They made all trips together-, were together on the -pleadings and on the briefs. Clearly, the plaintiff filled the role of counsel all the way through the litigation, and, there is nothing in the record indicating that the defendant considered the plaintiff in any capacity other than counsel until or near the time this action was instituted.

Defendant’s theory is that he was employed not as cocounsel but as general conn- *92 sel by the defendant corporation through the agency of the plaintiff, later ratified by the plaintiff’s principal, the defendant company.

There yere letters from the corporation introduced showing that the defendant was recognized as counsel in the case. Nowhere does there appear any indication of a separate emplosunent or the promise of a separate fee. The evidence points to employment of the plaintiff on quantum meruit and there was never an intimation of plaintiff’s withdrawal, from the case. There is no evidence of authority 'in the plaintiff to make contracts of employment with attorneys other than the customary authority to engage associate counsel. The fact that plaintiff at the time the suit was commenced in federal court was not admitted to practice in that court is no indication that a separate employment of defendant was necessary. The plaintiff was admitted to that court in, due time by customary motion. The correspondence of the defendant corporation and the acts of its officers indicate no other recognition of defendant than the recognition expected from a client to associate counsel of its regular attorney. No agency for the purpose of employing general counsel was shown to exist 'in the plaintiff. He held a contract with the corporation as agent for soliciting insurance. This contract, by express terms or by implication, did not create such an agency as would authorize employment of legal counsel. Plaintiff’s employment as attorney did not arise under his agency as insurance solicitor. It was wholly a separate employment.

That plaintiff was employed as counsel 'in the litigation is unquestioned. That the plaintiff first associated the defendant as counsel is also unquestioned. We can find nothing indicating a change of that relationship thereafter, until defendant disavowed the same when he commenced the present action.

The outcome of this litigation between the plaintiff and defendant is entirely dependent on their relationship during the litigation iu the federal court. Plaintiff engaged defendant to participate with- him in the prosecution of said suit. Nothing was said concerning the fee either -was to receive. Plaintiff’s employment was upon quantum meruit. Defendant was a participant with plaintiff in that employment. In the absence of an agreement between them, they were proceeding jointly upon that basis. That is the position taken by plaintiff in this action, and he bases his argument for reversal of the judgment upon the following proposition:

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Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 785, 49 P.2d 695, 174 Okla. 90, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 1373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-griggs-okla-1935.