Cooke v. Gove

114 P.2d 87, 61 Nev. 55, 135 A.L.R. 855, 1941 Nev. LEXIS 4
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJune 5, 1941
Docket3325
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 114 P.2d 87 (Cooke v. Gove) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cooke v. Gove, 114 P.2d 87, 61 Nev. 55, 135 A.L.R. 855, 1941 Nev. LEXIS 4 (Neb. 1941).

Opinion

OPINION

By the Court,

Taber, J.:

Between April 8, 1933, and December 16, 1937, appellant (plaintiff), an attorney residing and practicing at Reno, in Washoe County, performed legal services for F. W. Holbert, of Humboldt County, at the latter’s special instance and request. The services consisted in preparing for and acting as Holbert’s attorney at the trial of the case of Stock v. Holbert, an action to quiet title growing out of Holbert’s alleged right to redeem his Humboldt County ranching property, which had been sold for nonpayment of taxes. Judgment was given in favor of Holbert, who recovered the property after paying $6,657.26 for past-due taxes, interest, and penalties.

Holbert died December 16, 1937, and defendant was appointed and qualified as administrator of his estate. Plaintiff filed a claim against the estate for $5,994.60, being $119.60 for expenses and disbursements, and $6,025 for attorney’s fees, less $150 paid before Mr. Holbert’s death. Following the itemized list of legal services, expenses, and disbursements, a notation was appended to the claim reading, in part, as follows: “And as Holbert represented throughout (and which claimant believed) that if he lost the ranch, he would have absolutely nothing left, the employment as to compensation was essentially one contingent upon saving the ranch. There was no agreement as to amount of attorney’s fees, or how to be paid, — the subject was not even mentioned. Claimant’s own idea was to save the ranch for Mr. Holbert if -possible, and if successful, claimant felt Holbert *57 would be fair as to compensation, just as he always had been in a number of suits, etc., over a period of twelve to fifteen years previous. If unsuccessful, claimant did not, for the reasons above, expect to receive any compensation.”

The claim was allowed by the administrator in the sum of $2,119.60, being $119.60 for expenses and disbursements and $2,000 for attorney’s fees; it was rejected as to the balance. Plaintiff (appellant) then commenced an action against defendant (respondent), praying judgment in the amount of his claim, to wit, $5,994.60. In his answer, defendant admitted that plaintiff performed legal services for Holbert between the dates alleged in the complaint, but denied that plaintiff’s services were of the reasonable value of more than $1,500, of which $150 had been paid before Mr. Holbert’s death. The case was tried by the court, • without a jury, and judgment awarded to plaintiff in the sum of $2,619.60, .being expenses and disbursements in the sum of $119.60 and attorney’s fee in the sum of $2,650, less $150 paid as aforesaid. From that judgment plaintiff has taken this appeal.

The evidence offered and admitted by and on behalf of plaintiff consisted chiefly of the file in the Stock v. Holbert case (about 350 typewritten pages), nearly 50 letters and postals from Mr. Holbert to plaintiff, and the' depositions of two Reno attorneys who testified concerning the value of plaintiff’s services.

The main question in this case arises from appellant’s contention that the trial court erred -in refusing to award compensation to plaintiff on the basis that such compensation was contingent upon recovering the ranch property. In this connection we refer, without repeating it, to the statement made by plaintiff in his claim filed against the Holbert estate. In addition to this, the attorney-general of Nevada testified that Mr. Holbert, in the presence of plaintiff and himself, stated that the ranch property involved in the tax matter was the only *58 property he owned and that unless he got the property back he would be “on the county.” As a matter of fact Holbert, at the time of his death and for some time prior thereto, had between nine and ten thousand dollars in addition to the ranch property. At the trial of this case in the lower court plaintiff informed the ■ court that he learned of this at Mr. Holbert’s funeral, after all his services had been performed. In support of his representation to the court that up to the time of the funeral be believed that Holbert had no other assets besides the ranching property, plaintiff points to the admitted fact that he advanced costs, expenses, etc., for Holbert in the suit, aggregating $119.60.

The trial court’s holding was that even if plaintiff believed his remuneration dependent on the success of the Stock litigation, such belief was not entitled to any consideration in determining the amount of the fee. The record shows, and it is undisputed, that nothing whatever was said, either by Holbert or plaintiff, about the compensation to be paid the latter for his services. It is clear that there was no contract for a contingent fee. Ellis v. Woodburn, 89 Cal. 129, 131, 26 P. 963. Plaintiff, therefore, was entitled to recover only the reasonable value of his services. Shackleford v. Arkansas Baptist College, 181 Ark. 363, 26 S. W. (2d) 124.

' Appellant admits that his cause of action is based upon the reasonable value of his services; but it is his contention that in fixing such value the trial court, contrary to law, refused to consider, along with other circumstances, the fact that his only hope of remuneration depended upon the success of his efforts in recovering the ranching premises for Mr. Holbert. He argues that it is the fact of contingency which should control, rather than the precise method of its creation, or the presence or absence of any agreement for a contingent fee; and that the fact of contingency is as well established where the attorney knows that his client is wholly without means to pay him except from the proceeds of the litigation, as where there is an express contract that the fee *59 shall be contingent. Appellant cites Epp v. Hinton, 102 Kan. 435, 170 P. 987. In that case no agreement was made as to the amount of the fee, but there was an agreement that no compensation was to be paid except on the contingency of the success of the litigation.

The refusal of the district court to consider appellant’s belief that any remuneration would depend upon the success of the litigation was, in the opinion of this court, correct. To hold otherwise would in effect be adding a provision to the contract of employment which the parties themselves, both competent to contract, and between whom the relation of attorney and client had existed for some twelve or fifteen years, did not see fit to incorporate in it. This,, we think, the court cannot do. Crumlish’s Adm’r. v. Shenandoah Valley R. Co., 40 W. Va. 627, 22 S. E. 90; 7 C. J. S., Attorney and Client, sec 186, p. 1063, note 40. The reasonable value of the services is not augmented by the fact that they were to be performed gratuitously if not successful. In re Duffill’s Estate, 188 Cal. 536, 206 P. 42; Walbridge v. Barrett, 118 Mich. 433, 76 N. W. 973. In Robbins v. Harvey, 5 Conn. 335, plaintiff attorney, without any agreement as to the amount of compensation which he should receive, undertook, .at the request of client defendant, to investigate her claim, with no other prospect of remuneration for his services than what he might receive from the estate expected to be recovered. The supreme court held that these facts had no bearing on the question as to the worth of the service rendered, and that the value of the services could not be affected by the poverty of the defendant.

Appellant places much reliance upon three bankruptcy cases, In re Osofsky, D.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
114 P.2d 87, 61 Nev. 55, 135 A.L.R. 855, 1941 Nev. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooke-v-gove-nev-1941.