Buck v. City of Eureka

56 P. 612, 124 Cal. 61, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 941
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 18, 1899
DocketS. F. No. 764
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 56 P. 612 (Buck v. City of Eureka) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buck v. City of Eureka, 56 P. 612, 124 Cal. 61, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 941 (Cal. 1899).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, C.

Action on an implied contract for the value of services as attorney at law. The cause was tried by a jury, and plaintiff had the verdict and judgment thereon for four thousand seven hundred dollars, from which and from an order overruling defendant’s motion for a new trial, defendant appeals.

Plaintiff sues on quantum meruit, setting forth in his complaint a claim for services rendered defendant between July 12, 1886, and March 30, 1889, of the alleged value of ten thousand dollars, in defending a suit which was then pending against defendant in the circuit court of the United States, at San Francisco, wherein one Wing Hing was plaintiff. In a second count plaintiff claims for services rendered on and after August 5, 1889, of the value of five hundred dollars, in prosecuting an appeal in this court, in a cause entitled People v. Barney Croghan. Plaintiff’s prayer is for seven thousand dollars, with interest from December 13, 1889.

Defendant made a general denial by answer, and to the first cause of action further answered that if defendant incurred any liability, it was in excess of the income and revenue provided for defendant for any of the years during which the alleged services were performed, and was, therefore, invalid. The same answer is made as to plaintiff’s second cause of action. A further defense is made to the first cause of action, that on February 8, 1886, plaintiff was the duly appointed and authorized attorney of defendant; that on said day defendant entered into a contract with plaintiff, by an ordinance that day passed, whereby plaintiff was employed to act for defendant in said case of Wing Hing v. City of Eureka; that said contract was illegal and void, and that plaintiff’s said services were rendered under said contract and not otherwise, and said contract has not been rescinded, but is still subsisting.

1. The case, .so far as it involves the first cause of action, was here once before. In the complaint at that time plaintiff claimed under - an express contract embodied in the ordinance now pleaded by defendant and which will be found set out in the former opinion. Plaintiff was the city attorney when that ordinance was passed, and went out of office July 13, 1886, but continued to manage the Wing Hing case to its conclusion. He [64]*64sued, however, for services during the entire period of his employment, under this contract. It was held on the first appeal that he could not recover, because the contract was void. But the court said “that if the facts would warrant it, plaintiff should recover, not upon the original or void contract, but upon an implied one, for services rendered after. the expiration of his term of office”; and the judgment was reversed, with directions to the trial court to permit plaintiff to amend his complaint. (Buck v. Eureka, 109 Cal. 504.) The law of the case is thus settled to he that plaintiff may recover upon an implied contract for services rendered after the expiration of his term of office— i. e., after July 13, 1886. The Wing Hing suit was for one hundred and thirty-two thousand dollars damages alleged' to have accrued to fifty or sixty different Chinamen who had been driven out of the city of Eureka by a mob. Plaintiff testified that he continued to manage the defense after July 13, 1886, and to the close of the litigation, March 3, 1889, in which the ' city prevailed;- no notice was given to him by the council, or by his successor in office, that his services were dispensed with; it was known to the members of the council that he was performing the services; the labor performed was in the examination of the facts applicable to each of the fifty-six counts in the Wing Hing suit, preparation of a brief of the law governing the case, and in making many trips to San Francisco in connection with the suit at his own expense; three-fourths of the actual labor was performed after July 13th, and was of the value of seven thousand five hundred dollars. Plaintiff further testified that after he ceased to be the city attorney he had conversations with different members of the council relating to the Wing Hing case, two of whom he named; they desired to know how he was getting along with the case, and when told seemed pleased with the progress made; he had conversations with other members of the council, but could not name particularly any ’but Councilmen Mercer and Monroe; he also explained the situation of the case to his successor in office; he testified' as to one of' the councilmen: “He came to know how the matter was getting along and the council would like to know—gave me to' understand' that the council had discussed the matter and expressed a desire to know something about it, and he wanted to inter[65]*65rogate me for that purpose, and 1 told him how the matter was getting along.” Again he testified: “I was always given to understand by members of the council that my services were satisfactory; they never made any objection.” He further testified: “I never made any report to the council in regard to this suit and was never asked to, until I finally reported that I had recovered judgment in favor of the city.....That was the first written report.” He was asked by counsel for defendant if he had any official communication with the council about the matter during the period from July 12, 1886, to March, 1889, and answered: “Only in the way I have mentioned, by speaking to the different eouneilmen and giving them information in regard to it.” Plaintiff’s deposition was taken before the trial commenced. In it defendant’s counsel asked the witness to state how the council expressed its satisfaction with his services. He replied: “Members of the council at different times expressed themselves satisfied, and finally, when the case was terminated and I presented my bill, there was no expression of dissatisfaction in regard to my services—on the contrary, .the services were considered by all the eouneilmen with whom I conversed at that time, very satisfactorily [sic] indeed, and they all expressed themselves willing to pay me, but they never did.” Upon cross-examination defendant showed the original employment of plaintiff by the ordinance; a portion of the unverified complaint of plaintiff was introduced claiming on contract under that ordinance; some of the testimony of plaintiff at the first trial was also introduced tending to show that he claimed under contract, and he was searchingly cross-examined as to whether he was not still claiming under that contract or was ever employed otherwise than through this ordinance—contract —which was held to be void. Witness could not and did not deny that the first trial was based upon his employment by that ordinance. He replied: “I wish simply to add to that, as I said then, that I didn’t know whether it was a contract or not, but I considered it an employment under that ordinance; that I was to have full charge of the ease .... until judgment was finally obtained in favor of the city. Of course after the' 13th of July I was discharged as city attorney and continued in the case with the knowledge and consent of my successor and the [66]*66city council.” There was evidence adduced by defendant tend- . ing to contradict plaintiff's testimony, creating a clear conflict upon some points; indeed, upon some facts the preponderance seems to be with defendant—but we are not at liberty to attempt a reconciliation of this conflict.

Plaintiff is not claiming under the original contract at this time, nor does he seek to make it the basis of his implied contract.

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Bluebook (online)
56 P. 612, 124 Cal. 61, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 941, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buck-v-city-of-eureka-cal-1899.