Better Homes, Inc. v. Rodgers

195 F. Supp. 93, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2782
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. West Virginia
DecidedJune 22, 1961
DocketCiv. A. 244-M
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 195 F. Supp. 93 (Better Homes, Inc. v. Rodgers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. West Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Better Homes, Inc. v. Rodgers, 195 F. Supp. 93, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2782 (N.D.W. Va. 1961).

Opinion

CHARLES F. PAUL, District Judge.

This is an action brought against a lawyer, and the other members of a law firm with which he is associated, by his former client to recover damages for the negligent performance or nonperformance by the lawyer of his undertaking to file and prosecute in the Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia a petition for writ of error to a judgment for $13,500.00 which had been rendered against the client in the Circuit Court of Jefferson County, West Virginia.

The lawyer was local counsel for the defense of the client in an action brought in the Circuit Court of Jefferson County, West Virginia by one, Karl E. Hill, to recover damages suffered by reason of a fire which substantially damaged Hill’s home, which fire was alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the client’s employees while engaged in reroofing the house under a contract with the client. In the trial of the case, the defendant lawyer was associated with two other lawyers, nonresidents of West Virginia, who were in active charge of the case.

The trial in the Circuit Court resulted in a jury verdict for $13,500.00 against the defendant in that case (the plaintiff *94 here) on October 5, 1956. Numerous exceptions were saved to rulings of the trial court on the admission of evidence and the giving of or the failing to give instructions, and the overruling by the Circuit Court of the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict. The defense lawyers moved for a new trial and their motion was argued and overruled on April 23, 1957, and a judgment order in the amount of $13,500.00 was entered.

The defendant lawyer’s co-counsel requested him to take charge of the procedures necessary for appellate review, and he agreed to do so.

At the instance of the defendant lawyer, a proper bill of exceptions, signed by the Judge of the Circuit Court on July 15, 1957, and made a part of the record, and the record of the case, including a transcript of the evidence, were sent to the Clerk of the Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia on July 26, 1957. Under the applicable statute of the State of West Virginia, the time limit for the filing of a petition for appeal or application for writ of error is eight months from the entry of final judgment, and the rules of the Supreme Court of Appeals provide that any such petition or application must be accompanied by a memorandum of argument and authorities. The time limit for the filing of a petition or application, therefore, expired December 23, 1957. The defendant lawyer failed to file his petition for writ of error until January 13, 1958, and, when sent, it was not accompanied by the requisite memorandum of authorities and argument. As a result of the late filing, the Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia, on April 7, 1958, dismissed the petition for a writ of error.

The defendant lawyers, in this case, have moved for summary judgment based upon the pleadings, the facts elicited upon pre-trial conferences and hereinbefore •outlined, and an affidavit by the Clerk •of the Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia, indicating that, in a year’s time, the Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia had granted review upon applications for appeals and writs of error in something less than one-third of the cases presented.

The defendant lawyers contend that, as a matter of law, I should find that damages claimed by the plaintiff are conjectural and impossible of ascertainment with the degree of certainty requisite to the maintenance either of an action in contract or tort; that, at the most, if this is considered contract action, the plaintiff is entitled to nominal damages only, which would not be sufficient to give this court jurisdiction in a suit based upon diversity of citizenship.

The defendants’ argument runs that the plaintiff’s proof of damage requires the following assumptions:

(1) That, since appellate review in West Virginia is not a matter of right, the Supreme Court of Appeals would have included the Hill v. Better Homes case among the minority of cases in which review was granted;
(2) That, on submission of the case on review, the Supreme Court of Appeals would have reversed the judgment of the lower court and remanded the case for new trial; and
(3) That, upon new trial, the verdict and judgment would have been rendered and entered for the defendant upon substantially the same evidence on which the first jury unanimously found for the plaintiff.

Defendant lawyers persuasively argue that this court cannot make the requisite assumptions and findings, and that it is apparent that the worth of the chances of successful appellate review and successful new trial to the plaintiff here at the time it was deprived of those chances by the failure of the defendant lawyer to move in time, is considerably less than the minimum amount of this court’s jurisdiction.

Since a jury trial was not demanded by the parties and the case could be submitted to the court on final hearing simply by the addition to the record of the record and transcript in the Circuit *95 Court case, I deferred ruling upon the motion for summary judgment until final submission. The record and transcript of the trial in the Circuit Court was filed, and the case submitted, by stipulation, as upon trial to the court.

The defendants’ position that I should dispose of this case by summary judgment is appealing because it is repugnant to my sense of judicial propriety that I should sit in lieu of the Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia, to pass judgment upon the propriety of the rulings of the trial court, which is at least coordinate with mine. To do so I would have to go through the two stages of the appellate procedure and decide, first, that the case is of sufficient public importance or that the possibility of error is sufficiently apparent to make appellate review imperative, and, second, that there was prejudicial error in the trial, compelling the granting of a new trial. Even more distasteful would be my embarking upon the third stage. This would require that, upon review of the evidence as set forth in the written transcript (or such parts thereof as were properly admitted), I should find that the weight of the evidence adduced before the jury which heard that evidence and saw the witnesses, was, contrary to the verdict of that jury, on the side of the defendant in the case. Fortunately, I am not faced with the necessity of deciding whether I should enter this third stage. Both in argument and on brief, counsel for the plaintiff client has admitted that “what the plaintiff here has to show in order to recover is not merely that it would have been awarded a new trial by the Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia the • result of which might have been either for or against it, but it has to go further and satisfy this court that on a new trial the result could only have been in its favor, and no judgment could properly have been entered against it.” In my opinion, this concession is justified.

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Bluebook (online)
195 F. Supp. 93, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2782, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/better-homes-inc-v-rodgers-wvnd-1961.