Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railroad v. Rittenhouse

1955 OK 133, 285 P.2d 186, 1955 Okla. LEXIS 693
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 3, 1955
Docket36099
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1955 OK 133 (Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railroad v. Rittenhouse) 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
Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railroad v. Rittenhouse, 1955 OK 133, 285 P.2d 186, 1955 Okla. LEXIS 693 (Okla. 1955).

Opinion

DAVISON, justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment for attorney’s fees in favor of the movants, Irving H. Green, Rittenhouse, Hanson & Evans, Walter D. Hanson and S. G. Evans, against Chicago, Rock Island, and Pacific Railroad Company, defendant. The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court.

The movants were attorneys for one-John Tollie Smith in the prosecution of an action for damages for personal injuries against said railroad company, as defendant. On September 12, 1952, after trial, verdict, and ordered remittitur, judgment was rendered in favor of said Smith, as plaintiff, against the above-named defendant in the principal amount of $75,000. The movants here were employed on a fee basis of 33½ per cent of the amount recovered, contingent upon recovery and collection.. No endorsement was made on any of the pleadings or records of movants’ claim of attorney’s lien but the record discloses testimony of oral notification of defendant of ’said fee arrangement and lien, prior to the rendition of judgment. The defendant took preliminary steps toward perfecting an appeal from the judgment.

About the middle of November, 1952, the defendant, in an unethical manner, through a special claim agent, paid to the said Smith, $25,000 in full satisfaction of the judgment and secured from him an executed written “Release and Satisfaction of Judgment”. This was done without the-' knowledge or consent of his attorneys, the above-named movants. On January 2, 1953, the movants filed a motion in the original damage ■ suit, seeking a judgment against the defendant for $25,000, the amount due them as attorneys for the plaintiff. A copy of said motion and notice thereof was duly served on the defendant. Issues were joined and a trial thereof had to the court, resulting in judgment for movants, from which this appeal has been perfected. In rendering-judgment, the trial court made findings of fact and conclusions law as follows:-

“Finding of Fact
“The court makes the following findings of factr
“1. The plaintiff’s attorneys, Ritten-house, Hanson & Evans and Irving H. Green, hereinafter referred to as mov-ants, had an oral contract with the plaintiff, John Tollie Smith, for a fee of one-third of the amount recovered herein.
“2. That at the time defendant made settlement with the plaintiff and secured a release and satisfaction of judgment from the plaintiff, the defendant had actual notice of the contingent attorney fee contract between the plaintiff and said movants.
“3. That movants had, at all times subsequent to the entry of judgment herein in favor of plaintiff and against the defendant, an attorneys’ lien for the sum of $25,000.00, pursuant to. movants’ contract with the plaintiff.
“4. That the testimony of the plaintiff to the effect that one Harry Laird caused the plaintiff to employ Irving H. Green as one of his attorneys herein is contradicted by other testimony given by the plaintiff, and is therefore insufficient to support the contention of defendant-that, movants’ attorneys’ contract with plaintiff is void, illegal and unenforcible.. ■
■' “5. That this court has no jurisdiction’in this action to make any adjudication concerning the defendant’s contentions that movant Irving H. Green, a non-resident of this state, has heretofore had sqme kind of working arrangement with said Harry Laird and other laymen whereby the said Laird and others contacted railroad companies’ employees who had been injured in the course of their employment, recommended to such persons *188 that they employ Irving Hi Green as their attorney, paid cértain expenses of injured railway companies’ • employees or former employees in their efforts to secure settlements or adjudications of 'their claims against railroád companies, and by their acts and conduct, otherwise indicated that they ha'd personal interests in the amounts sought by, such injured persons against the railroad companies. However, this court is of the opinion that defendant’s attempted proof of the alleged acts of said Laird in procuring clients for said.Irving H. Green, ydiilp not within the scope of this hearing, presents a matter of .vital concern .to the bench and bar of.this state. Without attenipting to determine whether there is or is not any merit to defendant’s contentions regarding movant Green, Laird, and/or other laymen, this court recommends that the Oklahoma, Bar Association investigate such contentions made by the defendant, and should the Oklahoma Bar Association, from' its investigation find there have been improper acts of solicitation or other misconduct on the part of Laird or others in behalf of movant, Green, this court suggests in that event, that the Oklahoma Bar Association forthwith commence an action in a court of this state against all offending parties to secure necessary and proper relief.
.“Conclusions of Law
“The court concludes as a matter of law that movants now have an attorneys’ lien herein against the defendant in the sum of $25,000.00 and for which sum judgment is to be entered in favor of movants and against defendant, in accordance with a formal journal entry of judgment.
“Exceptions are allowed defendant to each and every finding of fact and conclusion of law.
“Done in Open Court at Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, this 12th day' of March, 1953.” ' '

Statements made by the court in the above-quoted findings give some indication of the fact that the large record in this case is replete with testimony of conduct of both parties which, if true, was not only unethical but reprehensible. It should however, be pointed out here that the testimony casts no reflection whatever upon the Oklahoma Attorneys employed in the case on either side.

The first and most important proposition presented by this appeal is stated by defendant in its brief, as follows:

■ “The court was without jurisdiction of the subject matter and the parties after the release and satisfaction of judgment was filed therefore the present judgment entered on the motion is 'void.”

The entire controversy hinges upon the meaning and effect of the provisions of 5 O.S.1951 §§ 6, 7, and 8, dealing with attorneys’ liens and the. method of perfecting them. .

It is contended that said section 6, supra, requires a written notice to be served upon the defendant, of the lien claimed. That was not done. ■ However the attorney for plaintiff testified that, in April, 1952, he told one of defendants’ attorneys of the contingent fee arrangement with plaintiff for one-third of the amount of recovery. All actions of the defendant as shown by other testimony point to the conclusion that defendant had actual knowledge of the lien claim. The statute does not provide what kind of notice shall be given nor its necessity in case’of actual knowledge. In the case of Goldberg’s Loan Office v. Evans, 169 Okl.

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Bluebook (online)
1955 OK 133, 285 P.2d 186, 1955 Okla. LEXIS 693, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-rock-island-pacific-railroad-v-rittenhouse-okla-1955.