Davenport v. Waggoner

207 N.W. 972, 49 S.D. 592, 45 A.L.R. 1126, 1926 S.D. LEXIS 86
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 12, 1926
DocketFile No. 5389
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 207 N.W. 972 (Davenport v. Waggoner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davenport v. Waggoner, 207 N.W. 972, 49 S.D. 592, 45 A.L.R. 1126, 1926 S.D. LEXIS 86 (S.D. 1926).

Opinions

CAMPBELL, J.

In June, 1915, the defendants, practicing attorneys in Sioux ¡Falls, entered into a contract with one C. whereby they agreed to prosecute to final conclusion a claim for damages for personal injury against the Wisconsin Granite Company upon a contingent fee, their compensation to be a sum equal to 50 per cent of the ultimate recovery; necessary expenses being first deducted. Thereafter, and in September, 19x5, the defendants entered into a subsidiary contract with one Egan, who was also at that time a practicing attorney in Sioux Palls, which contract recites defendants’ previous agreement with C., and provides that the said Egan should assist defendants in preparation and trial of said case, and that his compensation should be the one-half part of such attorneys’ fees as might be received by the defendants by virtue of their contract with C. The contract between defendants and Egan was made with the knowledge and approval of 'C. It is admitted by all parties that both contracts contemplated no fee or compensation to the attorneys, excepting a fee contingent upon ultimate success and recovery and proportionate to the amount thereof, without regard to the actual or reasonable value of services which might be rendered by said attorneys. It is further admitted by all that such contracts contemplated that the attorneys thereby retained should continue to render services in the matter to and including the final determination of C’s. case.

By virtue of these contracts Egan and the defendants prepared the case for trial, and tried the same in the lower court, where they secured a judgment for C. in the sum of $5,000. From this judgment the defendant corporation appealed to this court. Pending such appeal, after the filing of printed briefs, but before oral argument thereof, in April, 1916, Egan was disbarred. Subsequent to said disbarment, the defendants alone continued to givd the case of O. such attention as it required, including oral argument of the same in this court, appearance in this court in oppo[594]*594sition to application for rehearing, etc., with the result that the decision of the lower court in the C. case was here affirmed, and rehearing denied. Clinkscales v. Wisconsin Granite Co., 160 N. W. 843, 38 S. D. 205. Thereafter said judgment was paid, and the defendants, pursuant to their contract with C., received repayment of certain expenses advanced 'by them, and the sum of approximately $2,553 as a contingent attorneys’ fee pursuant to their contract with C.

When defendants received this money, they promptly notified Egan of that fact, and he went to their office. Defendants told Egan that, in view of his disbarment before the case was completed, they felt there should be an adjustment between them whereby they should receive somewhat more than one-half of the total fee. Egan flatly refused to discuss, or consider, any such proposition, and stated that, if he could not have one-half of the total fee, he would take nothing, and that he would fallow! them (the defendants) what the equity of the case was.

Under these circumstances, and within an hour or two after leaving defendant’s office, Egan instituted an action against them wherein his amended complaint set out the contracts above referred to, alleged performance upon his part of the contract between himself and defendants, and sought to recover pursuant to the terms of said contract, setting up as the measure of hisi recovery certain expense money advanced by him, plus one-half of the amount received by defendants as attorneys’ fees. In other words, his complaint was based squarely upon the contract between himself and defendants, treating said contract as fully performed upon his part, and seeking full recovery according to the: terms thereof. The trial court in that action directed a verdict in favor of Egan, from which the defendants appealed, and the case was reversed in this court. Egan v. Waggoner et al., 170 N. W. 142, 41 S. D. 239.

Subsequent to the decision in Egan v. Waggoner, the present plaintiff, Danvenport, being Egan’s trustee in bankruptcy, became the party plaintiff and the complaint 'was again amended, which second amended complaint sets up the contracts of employment hereinbefore referred to; specifies what services were performed in the C. case by Egan, and what services were performed therein by defendants after Egan’s disbarment; sets out [595]*595the receiving of the fee of $2,553 by defendants; and alleges that the reasonable value of the services performed -by Egan in the earning of said fee as compared with the services performed by defendants was $2,000; and seeks recovery for said $2,000, plus the sum of $73 expense money advanced by Egan. In other words, plaintiff no longer seeks to recover according to his contract, but seeks an amount considerably greater than he could have received by complete performance of the contract, apparently proceeding upon some theory of quantum meruit, but endeavoring to adopt as the measure of recovery, not the actual and reasonable value of services rendered by him, but the contingent or speculative fee of $2,553 actually received, and claiming to recover such proportion thereof as the services rendered by himself before disbarment 'bear, according to his views, to the entire services rendered by himself and the defendants, both 'before and' after his disbarment, from the beginning to the end of the C. case.

The case was tried below upon this second amended complaint, and was submitted to the jury by the learned trial judge upon a third and still different theory. He directed the jury, in subs'anee, to assume that the total fee of $2,553, which was finally received by defendants, represented the reasonable value of all legal services rendered both by Egan and by the defendants, and upon that basis directed the jury to apportion said sum of $2,553 into two parts, and determine how much was earned by Egan and the defendants prior to Egan’s disbarment, and how much was earned by the defendants alone after Egan’s disbarment. Then as to the first portion so found to be earned jointly by Egan and defendants, instead of directing a division thereof as sought by the second amended complaint in the proportion which the jury might find 'the value of the services of Egan bore to the válue of the services of defendants, the learned trial judge here departed from any theory of quantum meruit as pleaded in the second amended complaint, and returned to the contract between Eg'an and the defendants, and directed the jury to find for plaintiff for the one-half of such part of the total fee of $2,5.53 as they deteremined under the previous instruction to have been earned prior to Egan’s disbarment.

The jury found that of the total fee received $1,500 was earned by the defendants alone after Egan was disbarred, and [596]*596thereupon defendants’ motion for judgment notwithstanding was denied, and judgment /was entered in favor of plaintiff for one-half of the fee apportioned by the jury to the period prior to Egan’s disbarment, plus certain expense money advanced, amounting in all to $612, from which judgment the defendants now appeal.

There is no theory of law which would justify any such recovery as was asked by respondent in this second amended complaint 'whereby respondent sought to recover a considerably larger amount than he could possibly have received if he had fully and completely performed his contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
207 N.W. 972, 49 S.D. 592, 45 A.L.R. 1126, 1926 S.D. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davenport-v-waggoner-sd-1926.