Colley v. Sapp

1922 OK 131, 216 P. 454, 90 Okla. 139, 1922 Okla. LEXIS 371
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 18, 1922
Docket10578
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1922 OK 131 (Colley v. Sapp) 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
Colley v. Sapp, 1922 OK 131, 216 P. 454, 90 Okla. 139, 1922 Okla. LEXIS 371 (Okla. 1922).

Opinion

PITCHFORD, V. C. J.

The defendants in error, being attorneys-at-law, were employed by the plaintiff in error to bring an action in the Circuit Court of the' United States for the District of Kansas,' wherein the plaintiff in error, for himself, and also for himself as a stockholder in the New York Zinc Company, and all the stockholders whose situation in said corporation Was similar to that of himself, to have set aside and canceled certain mortgages, judgments, liens, etc., which Charles C. Wolcott and Francis E. Wolcott had and held against certain mining lands and property belonging to said New York Zinc Company.

The cause was referred to a special master, who, after hearing the evidence, filed his report recommending that a decree be entered granting substantially all the relief prayed for in the action- Before a decree had been entered on the report of the master, the plaintiff in error hired other counsel and requested defendants in error to withdraw from the case. ■ Thereupon defendants in error asked for, and obtained from the court, an order permitting them to withdraw from the cause. The report of the master was approved and the decree rendered. In the decree so rendered defendants in error were allowed the sum of $10,000 as their fee against the New York Zinc Company as an entity.

Thereafter the instant action was filed in the district court of Tulsa county by defendants in error. against the plaintiff in error to recover fees due them from plaintiff in error for the services for his individual benefit, and which inured to him alone as distinguished from the other stockholders of the New York Zinc Company and that corporation itself. Hereafter, for convenience, defendants in error will be referred to as plaintiffs, and plaintiff in error will be referred to as defendant.

*140 - -Upon trial--the' jury, returned a verdict in favor' of plaintiffs' for the sum of- $7,000. Defendant appealed to this court and the judgment of the, trial cqurt was reversed, the opinion toeing reported in 44 Okla. 16, 142 Pac. 989, the style of the case being Colley v. Sapp et al. The judgment was reversed for errors of the trial court in overruling objections to certain evidence, and error in giving the following instruction:

’> “The amount that may be recovered from £he: defendant by the plaintiffs is not to be governed in amount by the services performed for his individual benefit:, and which inured to him alone as distinguished from the' other stockholders of the New York Zinc Company, and that corporation itself, but the liabilities of the defendant would be' for the service performed under the contract, regardless of parties toenei'itted thereby, less any compensation otherwise received -by the plaintiffs or ' which ’has been otherwise provided for their .benefit.”

■ In reference to the above instruction, this court, in the opinion reversing the judgment of the lower court, said:

“The jury returned a, verdict for only $7,-000, which amount, it appears, exactly corresponds with ' the difference between the plus the $500 received by plaintiffs at the York Zinc Company (apparently $12,5001 ■plus the $600 received by plaintiffs at the commencement of their services and the ■/.Whole fee according to the only specific 'tes-tiinóny 'as' to'Ule valué of all their services; 'and if we could say that the jury thus allowed defendant a credit of the $2,600 in deference to the ’fact that the services fairly referable and apportionatole to ihe benefits received by the New York Zinc Company in that amount exceeded the $10,000 allowed against it, the error in the instruction mentioned would he harmless; but, instead of giving credit for $2,500 as such excess, the jury may have found, and we must assume followed the instructions and did find, the value of all the services rendered by plaintiff to be only $17,500, which explains the fact that the verdict for $7.000 is $2,500 less than it should have been if the jury had accepted as correct the opinions of the witnesses specifying $20,000 as the minimum value of all the services, so it appears the error was not harmless.”

The cause was remanded for new trial and was regularly set on the trial docket of the district court of Tulsa county for October 2’1\ 1918. When the same was reached on that date, it was continued by order of the court until -November 11, 1918. On that day, continued until November 12, 1918. On being reached for trial on November 12, 1918, neither the defendant nor his attorneys 'appeared in the mailer, and the court ordered the trial to proceed. The trial was had and judgment' rendered ini favor of the p aintiffs for the sum of $7,500, with interest thereon amounting to the sum of $4,515. No motion for new trial vas filed. On December 11, 1918, defendant filed his petition and motion to vacate judgment, felting up as grounds why the judgment should be vacated the following:

“That the judgment was rendered in the absence of the defendant, and that the defendant was prevented from defending said action by unavoidable casualty and misfortune, as more fully and completely set out in the affidavit of Arthur Miller, one of this defendant’s attorneys.”

The petition to vacate was heard by the’ court on December 80, 1918, and the saíne was denied. The. judgment, however, was modified to the extent of not allowing interest. From the judgment of the trial court refusing to vacate, defendant appeals.

Subsequent to the filing of the appeal in this court, the death of Hiram W. Currey, one of the plaintiffs, has been suggested, and by order duly entered, the cause has been revived in the name of Enos C. Currey, as administrator of Hiram W. Currey, deceased.

For reversal of the judgment numerous errors are assigned, but, as we gather from argument of counsel and '■ authorities cited, defendant is really relying upon but two grounds: First, that the judgment of the trial court is’excessive and inconsistent with and contrary to the opinion in this case rendered on the former appeal; and, second, that the trial court committed error in refusing to set aside and vacate the default judgment on the 12th day of November, 1918. One of the reasons for reversing the former judgment was error contained in one of the instructions to the jury as to the method of computing the amount to which the plaintiffs would -be entitled. As we understand the opinion, the trial court would not have committed error had the instruction been as follows:

“The amount that may be recovered from the defendant by the plaintiffs is to be governed in amount by the services performed for his individual benefit, and which inured to him alone as distinguished from the other stockholders of the New York Company, and that corporation itself.”

As to whether or not the judgment is excessive, we have no way of ascertaining. No exceptions were saved to the action of the trial court when the default judgment was taken; no motion for new trial was filed.

In Uncle Sam Oil Company v. Richards, 73 Oklahoma, 176 Pac. 240, it is said:

*141

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Bluebook (online)
1922 OK 131, 216 P. 454, 90 Okla. 139, 1922 Okla. LEXIS 371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colley-v-sapp-okla-1922.