Clark v. Herbert

1928 OK 534, 270 P. 329, 132 Okla. 272, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 760
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 18, 1928
Docket18157
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1928 OK 534 (Clark v. Herbert) 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
Clark v. Herbert, 1928 OK 534, 270 P. 329, 132 Okla. 272, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 760 (Okla. 1928).

Opinion

LEACH, C.

E. M. Clark, plaintiff in error, as plaintiff below, filed this action in the district court of Pawnee county, against Mary B. Herbert, to recover judgment for legal services alleged to have been rendered by him under a written contract entered into between the parties in tne year 1903. Upon a trial of the cause, a verdict and judgment was rendered in favor of the defendant, and plaintiff appeals. Parties retain their position here as in the trial court, and will be referred to as plaintiff and defendant.

In 1903, plaintiff, Clark, together with his partner, McGuire, entered into a written contract with the defendant, Mary B. Herbert, and her now deceased husband, under which the Herberts employed Clark and McGuire as attorneys to represent them in all litigation, in any and all courts to which there might be occasion to take the same, to recover 55 acres of land adjoining the town of Cleveland, Okla., known as the Wagg addition, which land had been previously deeded by Mary B. Herbert, owner, to S. R. Wagg, and by him platted into a townsite addition, and a portion of the lots therein sold and conveyed to third parties. The contract provided and stipulated, in part and in substance, that McGuire and Clark were to give their best skill and ability in representing the parties, and were to receive as consideration for their services an amount equal in value to an undivided one-third interest in the real estate, or any portion thereof that might be recovered or its equivalent.

Clark later acquired the interest of his partner, McGuire, in the contract. Pursuant to the contract of employment, suit was filed in the district court of Pawnee county in the name of the Herberts against S. R. Wagg and a large number of other defendants, to whom Wagg had sold lots in the addition. Upon a trial of such cause between the Herberts and the defendant Wagg, judgment was rendered in favor of the Herberts, cancelling the deed to the lands from Mary B. Herbert to the defendant Wagg, adjudging the defendant Wagg to have only a lien on the lands for a certain sum loaned by him to Herbert, and further adjudging and ordering an accounting between the parties to determine and adjudge the amount of the proceeds of the money derived from a sale of certain of the lots by Wagg to the third parties, and a referee was appointed.

Trial on the issues as between the Her-berts and tlie other parties defendant, who had purchased lots in the tract from Wagg, was continued, and a separate hearing and judgment was later rendered thereon. The defendant Wagg appealed from the judgment rendered against him to the territorial Supreme Court, where the judgment of the district court was affirmed, and the case is reported in 19 Okla. 525, 92 Pac. 250. Thereupon, the defendant Wagg appealed to the Supreme Court of the United States, where the judgment was again afiirmed, and the opinion of the Supreme Court of the United States therein will be found in 215 U. S. 546, 54 L. Ed. 321.

Upon a trial of the issues arising in the suit as between the Herberts and the other defendants in the action, who had purchased lots from defendant Wagg, the district court of Pawnee county adjudged certain of the defendants to be innocent purchasers, and denied the claim of the plaintiff to such lots, and further approved the report of the referee in such matter, finding the defendant Wagg indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $2,794.23, but ordered, however, that that portion of the decree relative to the defendant Wagg await the mandate from the Supreme Court on the judgment from which Wagg had appealed. Mary B. Herbert appealed to the state Supreme Court from the latter judgment of the district court, and this court in an opinion reported in 27 Okla. 674, 117 Pac. 209, Herbert v. Wagg, affirmed the judgment of the trial court.

The plaintiff in error in that appeal, Mary B. Herbert, desired to further appeal the ease to the Supreme Court of the United States, and to take some further action against the defendant Wagg, and she and her attorney, Clark, plaintiff in the instant case, apparently not being in accord in their views in the handling of the matter, her said attorney Clark did, at the request of Mary B. Herbert, execute, sign and deliver to her *274 a written instrument in tire following form and words:

“Law Office of E. M. Clark.
“Pawnee, Oklahoma, 2-16-11.
“Herbert v. Wagg et al.
“I hereby release my one-third to all that may be recovered by an appeal of the case to the U. S. Supreme Court, recently decided adverse to us in the state Supreme Court, and to any damages against Wagg for having conveyed to innocent purchasers, and accepting my one-third of what has been won now the same as though said decision was now final.
“E. M. Clark.”

Thereafter, Mrs. Herbert employed other counsel residing in the state of Missouri, upon a contingent basis, to represent her in the matter, and an appeal was attempted by her from the decision of the state Supreme Court to the Supreme Court of the United States, which appeal was dismissed for want of a record and prosecution. After such appeal was dismissed and the mandate of the state Supreme Court in that branch of the case handed down, the plaintiff in error here, Clark, joined by the other attorney subsequently employed by Mrs. Herbert, filed in the district court of Pawnee county an amended petition against the defendant Wagg, whereunder it was sought to recover from the defendant Wagg approximately $50,000, the alleged value of the lots conveyed by him to third parties, oil having been discovered on or in the immediate vicinity of the lots, after the filing of the first petition, and such attorneys appeared before the referee appointed by the court to hear the accounting and report on the issues then arising, the previous report and the accounting by the referee having been set aside by the district court on the ground that the defendant Wagg was not then a party before that court pending his appeal. Upon a hearing on the amended pleading, Clark and the other attorney, subsequently employed by Mrs. Herbert, both appeared, apparently acting together, and the referee made .a report upon such hearing finding the sum of $4,318 to be due Mrs. Herbert by the defendant Wagg as the amount realized and acquired by Wagg from the sale of the lots to third parties, but denied the claim of the plaintiff for any sum based upon the alleged actual value of the lots or the oil therefrom. To such report of the referee both parties. Wagg and Herbert, filed exceptions, and while such exceptions and report of the referee were pending, the defendant Wagg, who was a resident of Wisconsin, died, leaving no estate in the state of Oklahoma. Mrs. Herbert, through her attorneys residing in the state of Missouri, filed a claim with the county court of the county in Wisconsin having jurisdiction of the estate of S. R. Wagg, deceased, for the sum of $50,000 to recover the value of the lots sold and conveyed by Wagg to third parties.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1928 OK 534, 270 P. 329, 132 Okla. 272, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 760, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-herbert-okla-1928.