Davidson v. Board of County Commissioners

26 Colo. 549
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedSeptember 15, 1899
DocketNo. 3811
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 26 Colo. 549 (Davidson v. Board of County Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davidson v. Board of County Commissioners, 26 Colo. 549 (Colo. 1899).

Opinion

Chief Justice Campbell

delivered the opinion of the conrt.

[550]*550This is an action to enforce an attorney’s lien upon a judgment. On April 11, 1892, in the district court of La Plata county, M. R. Shields, as plaintiff, recovered a judgment against the board of county commissioners of La Plata county for $5,266.88. The plaintiffs here were the attorneys for Shields in that action, and it is for the fees earned by them in prosecuting the same that the attorney’s lien is claimed. On the 12th of May of the same year they filed in the office of the cleric of the district court a notice of their claim of lien, and on the next day caused to be entered in the margin of the record of the judgment a notice of their intention to rely on the same. Afterwards, and on the same day, Shields, the judgment (debtor, by a writing in the same margin, assigned the judgment as collateral security, to the Colorado State Banlc of Durango for a debt he owed it, and the attorney of the bank, who acted for it in taking the assignment, read this notice of plaintiffs before the assignment was made. On the 26th of that month plaintiffs filed with the county clerk of the county a notice addressed to the board of county commissioners in which they claimed a lien upon the judgment for their services, and admonished the board to reserve the amount of their fee, $1,025, from any settlement it might make of such judgment, otherwise the board would be held liable therefor. In October, 1892, the county delivered to the bank, in satisfaction of the judgment, certain of its bonds which were sold by the bank, which applied the proceeds on Shields’s indebtedness.

On the 14th of February, 1893, the plaintiffs brought an action in the county court of La Plata county to enforce their lien, naming as defendants M. R. Shields and the Colorado State Bank of Durango. Judgment went against plaintiffs, and they appealed to the district court of the same county where, after filing an amended complaint naming as defendants M. R. Shields, who was not served with process, the board of county commissioners of La Plata county, which appeared but filed no answer, and the Colorado State Bank of Durango, which filed an answer, a trial was had on the issues joined [551]*551under the amended complaint and this answer resulting in a decree in favor of the plaintiffs, adjudging the amount of their claim a lien upon the judgment, and ordering the hank to account for and pay the same to the plaintiffs.

The bank appealed to the court of appeals, and the judgment was reversed, the opinion of the court appearing in 7 Colo. Appeals, 91. The opinion discloses that in the judgment of that tribunal, there was no evidence that the board of commissioners received any notice, or had any knowledge, of the plaintiffs’ intention to resort to the judgment for a satisfaction of the lien, until service of summons upon them; and it further appeared from the evidence that the bank took its assignment of the judgment without any notice or knowledge of the plaintiffs’ claim, and that the board paid to the bank the amount of the judgment in good faith and in ignorance of plaintiffs’ claim. Plaintiffs, therefore, according to the opinion, having lost their' lien against the judgment debtor, the county, and their lien being subordinate to that of the bank, the decree was reversed.

The court, as a matter of law, however, held that, if there was a surplus of the judgment after the bank’s claim was liquidated, plaintiffs might have a lien thereupon; but as Shields was not served with process, and did not voluntarily appear, no judgment was, and none could have been, rendered against him upon which the bank’s liability depended, but, which, in any event, would not attach unless the amount of'plaintiffs’ lien was first established against Shields. The case was, therefore, remanded with leave to the plaintiffs to amend their complaint to make Shields a party.

After the cause was remanded to the district court, the plaintiffs, instead of amending as suggested, dismissed the action without prejudice, then, after first establishing the amount of their claim as a judgment against the estate of Shields (Shields in the mean time having died), brought this action in the county court of La Plata county making the board of county commissioners the sole defendant.

'Afterwards, in pursuance of rulings so requiring, the [552]*552plaintiffs filed an amended complaint making the hank and the personal representatives of M. R. Shields codefendants with the board. The representatives of Shields disclaimed any interest in the controversy, and answers were filed by the bank and the board. The answer of the bank contained a general denial and, as a separate defense, a plea of a judgment in its favor by the court of appeals.

Trial was had to the court without a jury, and judgment was rendered dismissing the action, to reverse which plaintiffs have sued out this writ of error.

We do not discuss in detail all of the questions raised, but shall determine the rights of plaintiffs both against the county and the bank, for we are clear that the judgment should be reversed and a new trial had.

This action is not barred by the statute of limitations pleaded by the board; plaintiffs have not been guilty of laches in enforcing their claim, and they are not estopped by any act or conduct to maintain the action.

The decision of the court of appeals is not res adjudicata. It has been held by this court in the case of Brown v. Tourtelotte, 24 Colo. 204, that the doctrine of the law of the case does not apply to decisions of the court of appeals in cases where their final determination may ultimately rest with the supreme court. This sufficiently disposes of the claim in that behalf made by the defendant in error.

But there is an additional reason, if the doctrine were applicable at all, why it should not be applied here, consisting of the fact that the evidence before the court of appeals was not the same as that in the record before us. That tins is so seems clear from a statement by the writer of the opinion in that case when he said that there was no evidence in the record that the board of commissioners had any notice or knowledge of plaintiffs’ intention to rely upon their lien, or that the bank took the assignment of the judgment knowing of plaintiffs’ claim, whereas in the record before us it conclusively appears that before the judgment debtor paid the bank the amount of the judgment, it had actual notice [553]*553that the plaintiffs intended to resort thereto for the enforcement of their lien, and that the bank, through its attorney, also knew of plaintiffs’ intention before the judgment was assigned. It is true that neither the filing by the attorneys with the clerk of the district court, nor their entry in the margin of the judgment record, of a statement that they claimed a lien for their fees was constructive notice to any one, for there is no statute providing for either act. That fact, however, is not decisive, for the attorney for the bank, who, in the light of the record, is its representative, read this entry in the margin before the judgment was acquired, and so the bank had actual notice of plaintiffs’ intention to enforce their lien.

The filing of the notice with the county clerk, he being ex officio

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Bluebook (online)
26 Colo. 549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davidson-v-board-of-county-commissioners-colo-1899.