Boyle v. Read

138 Ill. App. 153, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 718
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 23, 1907
DocketGen. No. 13,559
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 138 Ill. App. 153 (Boyle v. Read) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boyle v. Read, 138 Ill. App. 153, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 718 (Ill. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinions

Mr. Presiding Justice Holdom.

delivered the opinion of the court.

The relation of attorney and client existed between the parties to this record, and the controversy grows out of the claim of appellee, the lawyer, for his fees for legal services rendered appellant, the client.

That appellee was the lawyer of appellant and rendered efficient and valuable legal service in matters of importance, and that much time and ability was expended upon the affairs of appellant, which finally re-suited in a settlement of the controversy for the sum of $21,500—terms satisfactory to appellant—is not denied. The decisive question is one of law. It does not rest for determination upon controverted evidence, but upon the law to be applied to the enforcement or not of the contract in relation to fees, which appellee in his testimony claims he made with appellant and in faith of which he base's his right of recovery. We shall therefore confine our opinion to an interpretation of the-contract for compensation contained in the proof of appellee, and determine its effect upon his claim.

The trial in the Superior Court resulted in a verdict and judgment of $9197.71, to reverse which this appeal is prosecuted and errors duly assigned upon the -record, two only of which are material to be considered in the' conclusions to which we have arrived.

Appellant is the widow of David Boyle, who in his lifetime manufactured ice making and refrigerating machines. Some of the machines and their operating-mechanism had been patented by Boyle. While Boyle had no manufacturing plant of his own, he filled orders for machines by having them constructed by manufacturers. In this way he had built for the meat packers, Nelson Morris & Company, npon their order, several machines which were installed on ocean going-steamships carrying the Morris Company meat products. Boyle at the time of his death had claims against Morris & Company for money due for machines so furnished. Appellant was the sole beneficiary under the will of her husband. Nelson Morris & Company interposed many defenses to these claims, and they were eventually filed in the estate of David Boyle as desperate, under the statute. Thereafter the estate was settled in the Probate Court. This still left to appellant as executrix and sole beneficiary under David Boyle’s will, the right to prosecute such claims in the courts of this state. After having tried lawyers other than appellee, appellant in December, 1894, employed appellee to enforce these claims against Morris & Company. Appellee commenced and maintained from that time forward until a settlement was obtained in June, 1905, a vigorous and effective legal campaign against Nelson Morris & Company. The first aggressive step taken was the institution of a suit against the Morris Company, which was pending for more than ten years, when it was settled by a compromise of all claims for $21,500.

Mr. Bead in his testimony in relation to the compensation he was to receive, details the following conversation as had with Mrs. Boyle: That a few days before suit was started, and when he was advising that suit be commenced, because he believed nothing could be obtained without suit, Mrs. Boyle said: “ All right, Mr. Bead. What will you charge me for this litigation?” To which he replied, “Mrs. Boyle, I can’t tell you what I will charge; I don’t know how much work there will be in this case. It is a pretty large claim. It is amounting with interest now to about thirty-two or thirty-three thousand dollars. I might be able to undertake this work for you for a third or one quarter, but I can’t tell how much I shall charge.’,’ Mrs.- Boyle then said, “Will you put that in writing, Mr. Bead?” and Bead then said, “No, I do not want to do that because I can’t tell how much work I shall be compelled to put into this case.” That no contract could be predicated upon this conversation is patent. After this it appears the question of fees remained in abeyance until in the latter part of the year 1898 or early part of the next year, when Bead said to Mrs. Boyle in his office, “I have done a great deal more work in this case than either you or I anticipated,” and she said, “I know you have Mr. Bead, and you shall be well paid for it.” This colloquy amounted to nothing more than a promise of ample remuneration for services, warranting the indulgence of an expectation on the part of Mr. Bead that when success crowned his efforts, his client, realizing the magnitude of his services and entertaining a proper appreciation of them, would requite him therefor in an ample and not a niggardly manner.

Mr. Bead Says a third conversation was had in the Spring of 1900, and it is set forth in his brief as follows: “She,” meaning Mrs. Boyle, “came into my office one day, I think it was in the early part of 1900, or the Spring of 1900, and she said to me, ‘Mr. Bead, how am I ever going to get all this money back that I have been paying out on account of expenses?’ I said, ‘Why Mrs. Boyle you haven’t got as much at stake as I have in this case. If you don’t get your money back, I don’t get any fees out of this case. That is a good deal. My fees will amount to a good deal more- than the money you have paid out in expenses in this matter; but I will tell you what will be the best way to arrange that: When we have got through with this case and it is finally settled, we will deduct all of the expenses you have been put to in this litigation from the sum received, and divide the balance. ’ ’ ’ His counsel then asked him this question: “Divide it how?” He answered “In half, I take half and she half, and she says, ‘Very well, Mr. Bead. ’ ” He further testified in answer to a question from his counsel: “In 1901, in the early summer my-recollection is, she came in again, and she said to me that her son Henry was troubling her, and that her daughter, Mrs. Smith, was angry because she was supporting her son, and that she wanted to get away; she would like to have tins case disposed of in some way so that she could get away and get off where nobody would know where she was, and have a rest. I said to her, ‘Why, Mrs. Boyle, I cannot settle this case; we will never be able to settle this case until we can force the defendants to a trial. But’, I said, ‘I don’t want you to go to the defendants without I am present with you.’ She says ‘I won’t, Mr. Bead. I won’t go to them unless you are with me, and if I make any settlement at all, you shall get your half of the money just the same.’ ”

The admeasurement of damages is based upon the terms of this agreement and the judgment is in virtue of it. No evidence was proffered or received as to the value of the services rendered or as to the reasonableness or fairness of the compensation fixed by the agreement thus formulated. Furthermore the court instructed the jury that there could be no recovery on the quantum meruit count of the declaration, thereby leaving the case with the jury for determination under the special count setting forth the contract deducible from the conversations above recited. This contract does not violate the law against barratry and maintenance, and it is clear that it is not champertous. It is nevertheless just as clear that the contract was made by the attorney with his client in relation to an interest to be acquired by him in the subject-matter •of the litigation then going on.

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Bluebook (online)
138 Ill. App. 153, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 718, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyle-v-read-illappct-1907.