Byram v. Miner

47 F.2d 112, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 3403
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 13, 1931
DocketNo. 8896
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 47 F.2d 112 (Byram v. Miner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Byram v. Miner, 47 F.2d 112, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 3403 (8th Cir. 1931).

Opinion

BOOTH, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a decree in favor of appellees, interveners below, involving their right to recover from defendants, appellants herein, certain moneys claimed by in-terveners on account of attorneys’ liens in three actions against defendants in which in-terveners were attorneys for the plaintiff.

The main facts are undisputed, and are, in substance, as follows:

On July 5, 1925, one Minnie A. Erz, her husband, Mathias, and minor daughter, Virginia, residing at Watauga, S. D., were riding in an automobile driven by the husband. At a railroad crossing between Morristown a.nd Watauga, in Corson county, S. D., on the lino of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Company, said automobile was struck by a railroad train belonging to said company. The husband and daughter were killed. The wife, Minnie A. Erz, was injured.

In February, 1926, Mrs. Erz brought three actions against appellants, hereinafter called defendants, in the state district court of Ramsey county, Minn. One action was in the name of Mrs. Erz for her personal injuries sustained in the accident above noted. The other two actions were brought by her as special administratrix of the estates of her daughter and husband, respectively; she having been duly appointed such admin-istratrix by the probate court of Hennepin county, Minn. Appellees Miner and McDonald were attorneys for Mrs. Erz in each of these actions, having been appointed by a written agreement of employment. On March 9, 1926, these three actions were removed to the United States District Court, District of Minnesota, Third Division. Issue was joined in these actions in the federal court, and they stood undetermined and for trial therein until the opening day of the November, 1927, term.

Meantime, in September, 1927, while Mrs. Erz was undergoing treatment at the Mayo Clinic at Rochester, Minn., one Bingham, a claim agent for the defendants, called on her and advised her that he had come to settle her three eases. He told her, among other things, that the railroad company was not legally liable, but that it would cost about $3,509 to bring witnesses from South Dakota to Minnesota to try the cases. Bingham read her a letter, purporting to be from Miner and McDonald, to the effect that Miner and McDonald advised the railroad company that plaintiff’s three cases were not cases of lia-bilily, and that they were not going to try the cases, and that they could not recover for her upon the trial. Bingham told her further that she need not worry about the fees due her attorneys. Bingham suggested going to Minneapolis to consummate a settlement. She objected to this, and then Bingham told her they could settle the cases at Rochester, Minn., and that the company would settle the three cases that were then pending in the United States court for Minnesota for $3,550. Mrs. Erz took a week to think the offer over, and about October 8, 1927, Bingham again called and again offered her $3,550 in settlement, and she agreed with Bingham that she would accept the $3,550 in settlement of her three eases then pending in the United States court for Minnesota. Bingham then advised her for the first time that it would be necessary for her to go with him to South Dakota to make the settlement and that it could not bo made either at Rochester or Minneapolis, but bad to be made at Lemmon, S. D.; that he could not settle at Rochester because she would have to be appointed administratrix within the state of South Dakota. The result was that early in October, she went with Bingham to South Dakota at the expense of defendants, where the following steps were taken under Bingham’s guidance: She was introduced to a local attorney there, and with his aid was appointed special administratrix of the estates of her deceased husband and daughter by tbo county court for Corson county, S. D.; she at once began three actions in the circuit court of the Twelfth judicial circuit of South Dakota against defendants for damages on the identical causes of action set up in the eases pending in tho United States District Court in Minnesota.; service was had on the defendants; and on October 10, 1927, she and the attorney provided for her by Bingham, and the local attorney for defendants, appeared before tho judge of said Twelfth judicial circuit at Lcinmon, S. D. The attorneys for defendants tendered judgments in said three actions as follows: $1,550 in the action involving ihe death of Mr. Erz; $1,000 in the action involving the death of the daughter; and $1,000 in the action involving injuries to Mrs. Erz. These tenders were accepted by Mrs. Erz, and judgments were entered thereon accordingly. On the same day, the amounts of the judgments were paid in cash by Bingham to Mrs. Erz, and the several judgments were duly satisfied of record.

On about October 19, 1927, the answers of the defendants in the three actions then [114]*114pending in the United States District Court in Minnesota were amended, and in each of such amended answers, the judgments and the satisfactions thereof in the circuit court of the Twelfth judicial circuit for Corson county, S. D., were asserted in bar of the further prosecution of the actions.

At the opening of the November, 1937, term of the United States court for the Third division of the district of Minnesota, the actions were dismissed on account of the bar of the three judgments last mentioned. Thereafter Miner and McDonald, the attorneys for the plaintiff in said actions, petitioned the court to have the dismissals vacated and set aside for the purpose of having the court summarily determine their liens and grant to them judgment against defendants for the amount of their liens, or, in the alternative, to permit Miner and McDonald as lien claimants to intervene in said actions for the purpose of having the court determine their liens. The application of Miner and McDonald was contested by the defendants. After various hearings, the court, on February 25,1929, entered an order containing the following:

“The questions of fact involved in this proceeding ought not to be determined summarily by this court on affidavits, and I am therefore granting the motion of Miner & McDonald in so far as they ask for permission to intervene in these actions and to have them reinstated for that purpose. They may, within ten days after the filing of this order, serve and file their complaint or complaints in intervention, and the defendants may have ten days within which to answer the complaints, and thereafter Miner & McDonald may have ten days in which to reply. After issues are joined, the actions may be placed upon either a general or special term calendar for trial.

“In so far as the dismissals of these actions affect the right of Miner & McDonald to intervene for the purpose of collecting the amount of their lien, they may be set aside.”

In their pleadings, the interveners alleged the foregoing facts, and further alleged that the proceedings in South Dakota were all without their knowledge or consent. They further alleged that, at the time of the settlement in South Dakota, interveners had an attorney’s lien on the several causes of action for services and necessary' expenses incurred. The prayer was for judgment against defendants in the sum of $1,775 for services as attorneys, and for $220.35 for expenses.

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47 F.2d 112, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 3403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/byram-v-miner-ca8-1931.