Countryman v. California Trona Co.

170 P. 1069, 35 Cal. App. 728
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 31, 1917
DocketCiv. No. 2262.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 170 P. 1069 (Countryman v. California Trona Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Countryman v. California Trona Co., 170 P. 1069, 35 Cal. App. 728 (Cal. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

RICHARDS, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of plaintiff for the sum of thirty-nine thousand dollars and costs, and from an order denying defendant’s motion for a new trial.

The action was instituted for the recovery of the sum of forty thousand dollars, less the sum of one thousand dollars paid on account, alleged to be due from the defendant to the plaintiff as counsel fees. The complaint is in two counts, one upon an express contract for the payment of the above-named sum; the other a count for the recovery of said sum as the reasonable value of the plaintiff’s professional services. The answer of the defendant denies the existence of any express contract for the- employment of plaintiff to render any professional services whatever; and also denies that any such services which the plaintiff may have rendered to the defendant were of the reasonable value of forty thousand dollars or any other sum whatever, and alleged that for any services which the plaintiff may have rendered to the defendant he has been fully paid. The defendant also pleads the bar of the statute of limitations to the action.

The cause was tried before a jury demanded by the defendant. The trial before such jury occupied nine days, at the conclusion of which the jury unanimously rendered a verdict *730 in plaintiff’s favor for the full sum demanded in his. complaint. The defendant moved for a new trial upon the grounds of insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict; that said verdict was against law, and also upon the ground of errors of law occurring at the trial and fully specified in the bill of exceptions. The entire record of the trial is before us, and is very voluminous.

The facts of the case, in so far as their recital may be necessary for its decision upon appeal, are as follows: The defendant is a mining corporation organized under the laws of the state of California, with a capitalization of one million dollars, and owning or claiming to own locations embracing forty-one thousand two hundred acres of mineral lands in the counties of San Bernardino and Inyo in said state, containing deposits of potash, soda, and trona of vast and variously estimated value. The corporation began its operations for the development of these properties in the year 1908, and in the month of August of that year entered into an agreement with the Foreign Mines Development Company, an English corporation, for the purpose of having provided the necessary capital for such development, giving its mortgage upon the properties to the latter corporation to secure such advances and expenditures as it might have, and also such bonuses as under the agreement it was entitled to receive. After the development work had proceeded for a little more than a year the mortgagee gave notice of its election to consider all moneys secured by said mortgage to be due and payable, and of its intention to proceed to a sale of the property under the terms of the mortgage. Thereupon the mortgagor, the appellant herein, commenced an action in the superior court of Alameda County to enjoin the proposed sale, and secured a temporary injunction to that effect, whereupon the defendant therein, the Foreign Mines Development Company, filed its answer and cross-complaint, praying for the foreclosure of its said mortgage, and also filed its application for the transfer of the' cause to the federal courts. This transfer being accomplished, the suit was referred to the master in chancery to take testimony therein. In the meantime, and" during the pendency of said action, the California Trona Company granted to one E. H. Merrill an option to purchase all of its said properties for the sum of one million dollars. At that time the plaintiff in this action was the attorney *731 for said E. H. Merrill, while the defendant herein had been theretofore and continued to be represented by one J. Harwood. The existence of the foregoing option in the said Merrill, together with the various involvements of the defendant herein accruing out of or coincident with its financial and legal difficulties with its mortgagee, brought the said E. H. Merrill and his counsel into the close relations of a common interest with the defendant herein in an effort to extricaté the properties of the defendant from' its several imminent dangers of being lost to it. The plaintiff herein and the counsel for the defendant herein were thus brought into association for the protection of this common interest of their clients, in the course of which the plaintiff co-operated with the defendant’s counsel in the preparation of certain affidavits by the president and directors of said corporation for use in the course of their pending suit in the federal court, and also participated in certain hearings therein. About this time, also, some trouble seemed impending with jumpers upon the property, in the course of which the plaintiff was called into consultation with Mr. Dolbeer, the general manager and one of the directors of the defendant, and performed some services in that connection and also in the wTav of advising and preparing relocations of certain of the defendant’s claims. While these matters were impending the plaintiff in the month of September, 1910, received a telegram from Mr. Dolbeer requesting him to be formally associated with Mr. Harwood in the pending action in the federal court, and he thereafter appeared as representing the plaintiff (this defendant) therein, and also acted as its counsel in the various other difficulties in which it either was or was likely to become involved. In the month of December, 1910, the defendant held a corporate meeting in the city of San Francisco, at which its board of directors was filled out so as to consist of directors Boyes, Dolbeer, Simon, Philips, and Bartholomew, Dr. Boyes being elected president of the corporation and Mr. Dolbeer vice-president and general manager. A few days thereafter Mr. Dolbeer and Director Philips visited the plaintiff’s office in said city for the purpose of making an agreement covering his compensation for his past and future services, at which time the plaintiff said to Dolbeer and Philips that his fee would be forty thousand dollars for his past services and his future services in the fore *732 closure suit. After some discussion a written contract was executed on behalf of the California Trona Company by said Dolbeer as its manager, which provides as follows:

‘ ‘ That for and in consideration of the legal services heretofore rendered by said Countryman to said California Trona Company, and for the legal services to be rendered by said Countryman as such attorney at law, in the suit pending before the United States Circuit Court in and for the Northern District of California to foreclose the mortgage of the Foreign Mines Development Company on the property of said California Trona Company in San Bernardino county, California, there shall be paid to said Countryman the sum of forty thousand ($40,000) dollars in full settlement and discharge and satisfaction of all of said legal services.

“In witness whereof the parties hereto have executed these presents the day and year herein first above written.

“California Trona Company, “By C. E. Dolbeer, Mgr.
“R H. Countryman.”

There is no evidence that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
170 P. 1069, 35 Cal. App. 728, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/countryman-v-california-trona-co-calctapp-1917.