Dale v. Richards

21 D.C. 312
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 30, 1892
DocketNo. 30,515
StatusPublished

This text of 21 D.C. 312 (Dale v. Richards) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dale v. Richards, 21 D.C. 312 (D.C. 1892).

Opinion

The Chief Justice

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was an action by the plaintiff to recover of the defendant money which he alleged the defendant as his attorney had collected upon a claim which he had placed in his hands for suit and judgment, and which he avers in his declaration, had been paid over to the plaintiff. The defendant pleaded to the declaration, first, nil debet; second non [313]*313assumpsit; third, a set-off of $550, alleged to be due him for professional services rendered to plaintiff; fpurth, a tender of $1,902 as a portion of the sum demanded in the declaration.

Issue was joined upon these pleas, and trial had.

A case is stated and a bill of exceptions taken.

The only question made by counsel for the plaintiff, in argument, is in reference to the rejection of certain prayers which the plaintiff asked the court to give to the jury, and to the charge of the court as given to the jury. It, however, becomes necessary, in order to understand the force of the exceptions and the refusal of the court to grant the prayers asked by the plaintiff, and also to understand the charge of the court, that some statement of the evidence given before the jury should be made.

It appears that the plaintiff himself testified on the trial, in his own behalf, that he placed a claim in the hands of defendant for collection; that no special agreement was made between the parties as to the fee. There was nothing said about it being a contingent fee. A judgment was obtained, and the plaintiff gave no instructions to the defendant to institute an equity proceeding in aid of execution upon the judgment. He did not expect him to institute such proceeding. He admits that after the judgment, and after the money was received by the defendant from the plaintiff’s debtor, he received from the defendant a check for tire sum of $2,224.27, which, he says, contained upon its face a receipt or memorandum in settlement of said judgment, and that he declined to receive the same, and returned it to the defendant with a note to the defendant, stating that the defendant had charged too much for his services. The plaintiff says he expected to pay the defendant what his services were reasonably worth, whether successful or not.

He then offered in evidence the record in the case of Dale vs. Collins, at Law, No. 26,902.

The plaintiff then called the defendant as a witness in his own behalf, who testified that the full amount of the judg[314]*314ment rendered in the case of Dale vs. Collins, was paid to him on or before the 7th day of April, 1887.

The plaintiff then rested.

Thereupon the defendant was sworn, and testified in his own behalf that he understood from the fact that he had prior to that time, rendered services to the -plaintiff upon a contingent fee, by agreement, and from the further fact that the plaintiff paid him nothing at the time the notes were put into his hands, or during the subsequent litigation, and from general conversation with the plaintiff, that the fee was to be contingent upon the recovery of the money; that the case was a difficult one, involving two quite intricate problems of law; that he desired help in the matter, and with the consent of the plaintiff, employed Cole & Cole to assist him. There were two demurrers in the case, and both of them were argued. Several days were spent in court upon the hearing of the case, which was strongly contested by the defendant, Collins. The defendant testified that it was necessary for the interests of the plaintiff that judgment should be obtained as speedily as possible, because one of the defendants, the maker of the note, was insolvent, and the only property of the other defendant, the indorser, was a piece of real estate upon which there was a deed of trust which was about to be foreclosed. After the judgment was recovered, the land records of the District of Columbia were examined, and a suit in equity was instituted by the defendant for the plaintiff, to charge the equity of the judgment debtor, William R. Collins, in his real estate, with the payment of this judgment. The proceedings in the case in equity were offered in evidence by the defendant.

He says that after he had collected the amount of the judgment, he informed the plaintiff, and intimated to him that the fee for his services would be $500. The plaintiff objected to that amount, and after one or two other interviews between the plaintiff and the defendant, the plaintiff suggested that the proceeds of the judgment be deposited by defendant in bank, and a check for the amount due there[315]*315from to the plaintiff be forwarded to him. The defendant thereupon deposited the money in the National Bank of Washington in his own name, not as .trustee or attorney. The fund was not kept separate, but was included in his own account, and he checked against it.

The defendant says that he concluded, rather than to have any further difficulty with the plaintiff, to deduct only $250, which he intended to pay to Cole & Cole as their half of the fee, and trust to getting the balance of his fee from the plaintiff at some future time, as he had an unsettled account with him for services rendered in another case. The defendant thereupon drew his check on the National Bank of Washington to the order of the plaintiff for the sum of $2;224.27, being the proceeds of said judgment, less $250, and delivered the same to the plaintiff, accompanied by a letter.

He testifies that $500, in view of the services rendered, was a fair, reasonable and moderate fee. The check for the amount sent to the plaintiff was returned to him by the plaintiff. The note and check are as follows:

Washington, D. C., April 16, 1887.
John R. Dale, Esq.
Dear Sir: Enclosed please find my check for $2,224.27,
in Collins’ case, with a statement of amount collected and fee deducted. As you do not call for it, I have put it in hands of a friend to hand to you. Yours truly,
(Signed) A. C. Richards.
(No. 354.) Washington, D. C., April 14th, 1887.
The National Bank of Washington, of Washington, D. C.
Pay to John R. Dale, or order, two thousand two hundred and twenty-four and dollars.
$2,224.27. (Signed) A. C. Richards.

The defendant further testified that the money was kept by him and no use thereof was made; that it was of no use [316]*316or advantage to him, but was a disadvantage; that he always had the amount in bank to his credit until after this suit was brought, and after that time it may have been reduced below the amount, but he held himself in readiness to pay the full amount due, and could have done so at any time upon an hour’s notice; that he had, subsequently to the time he deposited the money in the National Bank of Washington, the exact date he could not state, but about the time the suit wias brought, transferred his account from said bank to the Columbia National Bank; that the $50 charged in his bill of set-off against the plaintiff was for services rendered by him for the plaintiff in a suit against Joseph Anderson, Law, No.

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Bluebook (online)
21 D.C. 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dale-v-richards-dc-1892.