Corley v. Corley

44 S.E. 132, 53 W. Va. 142, 1903 W. Va. LEXIS 16
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 11, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 44 S.E. 132 (Corley v. Corley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Corley v. Corley, 44 S.E. 132, 53 W. Va. 142, 1903 W. Va. LEXIS 16 (W. Va. 1903).

Opinions

POEEENBARGER, JUDGE:

A chancery suit-in the circuit court of Braxton County, for the settlement of the estate of W. L. J. Corley, instituted by A. W. Corley, executor, against Sarah C. Corley, the widow, and others, in 1885, was still pending in 1898, and Louisa W. Kelly, (nee Corley,) not having then received from the executor all that was due her under the will of her father, employed B. S. and C. Ii. Bland, partners in the practice of the law, doing business as Bland and Bland, to prosecute her claim to final settlement in said suit, which they did and procured a decree to be entered in her favor on the 22nd day of January, 1901, for the sum of $956.72, subject to a credit of $200.00. Immediately afterwards, a controversy arose between Mrs. Kelly and her attorneys about counsel fees, they claiming from her $350.00, and she contending that she owed them nothing. She had paid them about $200.00, which sum, she insisted, was all she owed them under the contract of service. They admitted the payment of the $200.00, but insisted that that sum was due them for services in procuring the transfer of something over $8,000.00 from the hands of her guardian in "West Virginia to those of her guardian in Pennsylvania, to which state she had moved.

Mrs. Kelly, by a written notice to the executor, forbade payment by him to her attorneys and they thereupon gave him notice, in writing, that they claimed and would assert an attorney’s lien upon the funds in his hands for their fees. Thereupon the executor presented his petition to the judge of the circuit court showing that J. S. Hyer had caused an attachment against Mrs. Kelly for $313.05, to be levied upon her estate in his hands; that soon afterwards, Bland and Bland had given notice of their claim of an attorney’s lien on the fund for fees, amounting to $350.00; that later the sheriff of Braxton County had commenced a proceeding against him for the collection out of said fund of taxes due from Mrs. Kelly, amounting to $103.71; that there [144]*144was a dispute among the parties as to their rights of priority, in respect to said fund; and that Mrs. Nelly was endeavoring to have an execution issued against him for the sum decreed to her; and praying that she be enjoined from suing out an execution or any process for the collection of said sum until the claims asserted against it should be settled and that the parties interested be compelled to litigate their respective claims before the court. The injunction was awarded, Mrs. Kelly filed her answer, denying liability to Bland and Bland, and they appeared and answered also, setting up their claims. Then on the 31st day of August, 1901, an order was made, directing an issue out of chancery as to tire matters in controversy, and on the 30th day of November, 1901, Bland and Bland moved the court to set aside the order directing said issue, which motion was overruled, and jury was impanneled and the issue between Bland and Bland and Mrs. Kelly tried. The jury found for the defendant, Mrs. Kelly. A motion was made to set aside the verdict on the ground that it was contrary to the law and the evidence, and that the court had erred in directing the issue out of chancery and in overruling a motion to set aside said order, but the court overruled the motion and entered the following order: “Therefore it is considered by the court that L. W. Kelly recover of B. S. Bland and C. H. Bland, partners in the practice of law under the firm name of Bland & Bland, her costs in this behalf expended.” Thereupon Bland and Bland obtained an appeal.

There is no necessity for inquiry as to whether the proceeding in which the order was made is a pure interpleader suit in equity, whether the final disposition of the controversy must be by a decree, either upon, or without, a verdict upon an issue out of chancery, according to the nature of the controversy and the evidence; or the statutory interpleader given by section 1 of chapter 107 of the Code, in which the final decision is by judgment; or a proceeding by mere motion to the court, upon citation, for the adjudication of conflicting claims, respecting a fund in court, in which there must be an order, decree or judgment, either giving or disallowing what is claimed. There is no judgment or decree here saying whether Bland and Bland shall or shall not have the amount claimed by them or any part thereof, nor whether the fund upon which they make their claim [145]*145has been decreed to anybody else. Tlie order gives judgment against them for costs only and is silent as to the claims set up in their answer.

There are a few eases that hold that the existence or rendition of a judgment may stand upon mere inference or intendment, where there is no positive, affirmative, or certain rendition of judgment, but where enough appears in the order to show that the court intended to render judgment or to support an inference that the court so intended. Thus, in Kase v. Best, 15 Pa. St. 101, 53 Am. Dec. 573, the court held the entry made by a justice of the peace, “Therefore plaintiff .for costs” to be a sufficient rendition of judgment, saying, “It was clearly the intention to give final judgment for the defendant, and, that being evident, the magistrate is not to be held to strict form.” In Brown v. Parker, 97 Fed. Rep. 446, a judgment merely against the plaintiff for costs in a blank amount, reciting that it is rendered on a verdict for defendant returned by direction of the court is sufficiently final and definite to give- the right of appeal. All that is said in the opinion in support of this decision is, “We are of the opinion that the practical and probably the legal effect of the judgment is a dismissal of the action.The plaintiff in error can hardly proceed to recover damages for the conversion of the property in suit, in the face of this recorded judgment.” No precedents are cited for the decision in either of these cases, and in the opinions, the orders held good are admitted to be exceptionally and grossly defective in matter of form. Moreover, the courts are compelled in each case to say that they reached the conclusion that judgment was rendered, by inferenc only. The weight of authority as well as reason stands against them. A verdict is no judgment. It is a mere report to the court by the jury on the matters submitted to them in the course of trial, and may be set aside by the court for want of sufficient evidence to support it, or for eroneous rulings by the court which vitiate it. It is, in no sense final until the court pronounces upon it the sentence of the law, quad recuperet, (that the plaintiff recover), or nil capiat, (that the plaintiff take nothing by his bill). "“Judgment is the sentence of the law upon the matter contained in the record.” 3 Blk. Comm. 395; Steph. Pl. 138. There must be a declaration by the court of the consequences which the law attaches to the [146]*146facts, in order to determine tire subject matter of the controversy between tbe parties. Until there is such declaration, there is no judgment. For this reason, an adjudication merely of the costs against one party or the other, upop. the verdict, without pronouncing any judgment in reference to the controversy has been held not to be a judgment. Hanks v. Thompson, 5 Tex. 6; Warren v. Shuman, 5 Tex. 442; Scott v. Burton, 6 Tex. 332; 55 Am. Dec. 782; Hancock v. Metz, 7 Tex. 177; Lisle v. Rhea, 9 Mo. m. p. 103, t. p. 107. Cost is a mere incident or sequence of a judgment, following it like a shadow.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 S.E. 132, 53 W. Va. 142, 1903 W. Va. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corley-v-corley-wva-1903.