Dunbar, to Use v. Mercer

193 A. 479, 128 Pa. Super. 138, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 109
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 28, 1937
DocketAppeal, 77
StatusPublished

This text of 193 A. 479 (Dunbar, to Use v. Mercer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunbar, to Use v. Mercer, 193 A. 479, 128 Pa. Super. 138, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 109 (Pa. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion by

Parker, J.,

This action in assumpsit by J. F. Dunbar, to the use of N. F. Arble, against H. Fred Mercer, Esq., was tried before a jury and at the conclusion of the trial the court directed a verdict for the defendant. The use plaintiff, the appellant, complains of the refusal of his motion for a new trial contending that he presented sufficient evidence to support a verdict.

The plaintiff, by the admissions contained in the affidavit of defense and the testimony of defendant called as on cross-examination, supported the facts alleged in the statement of claim. We will first detail *140 those facts. J. F. Dunbar, the legal plaintiff, had a claim against Avey & Irish on which he expected to realize a large sum of money. He had employed H. Fred Mercer, the defendant, a prominent member of the Allegheny County Bar, to prosecute the claim and an action in assumpsit had been instituted in common pleas at No. 1439 October Term, 1931. On May 29, 1934, Dunbar, being indebted to N. F. Arble, the use plaintiff, in the amount of $2,142, assigned to Arble “sufficient money out of any sum recovered by reason of or verdict in a suit at No. 1439 Oct. Term 1931” to satisfy the claim of $2,142, and directed his attorney, H. Fred Mercer, Esq., “to withhold said sum recovered in the above case and make payment thereof to N. F. Arble direct.” Mercer, in reply to a notice of the assignment, gave Arble the following writing: “And now to wit May 29 1934 service of a true and correct copy of the above assignment is accepted, with the understanding that my fee comes first and the claim of N. F. Arble is secondary thereto and will only be paid from balance after fee is paid. (Signed) H. Fred Mercer Atty, for J. F. Dunbar.” On October 23, 1934, the suit against Avey & Irish was compromised for $4,000 and, after the payment of the attorney fees due and a small item, now of no importance, Dunbar placed in the hands of Mercer the balance of $2,360. On October 25, 1934, Mercer paid Arble $642.60. Mercer having refused to pay Arble any further sum, this suit was brought to recover the unpaid balance of the $2,142, or $1,499.40.

The defense set forth in the defendant’s answer was, in substance, that defendant was acting only as attorney for Dunbar; that prior to the assignment to Arble and receipt of notice by Mercer of such assignment, Dunbar had executed two similar assignments affecting the same fund, one to Interstate Collateral Loan Company on August 11, 1932, for $1,010, and the other to the receiver of South Highland Apartments, Inc., on *141 December 28,1933 for $707; that he had received notice of these assignments at about the time that they were respectively executed and long before the Arble assignment; that, in addition to such assignments, Dunbar was indebted to others, he was insolvent, and bankruptcy proceedings were threatened; that at a conference at which Dunbar and Arble were present, after the compromise with Avey & Irish was effected, Arble, in view of the prior claims and the threatened bankruptcy, agreed to accept thirty per cent of his claim, or $642.60, which was paid to him and which sum was within a few cents of the balance which would remain if the prior claims were paid in full. Evidence, offered as part of plaintiff’s case, was produced tending to support all of the allegations in the affidavit of defense. Arble, however, denied that he made a compromise of his claim or agreed to accept thirty per cent of his claim and asserted that the payment made to him was only on account.

It was also developed as a part of plaintiff’s case that after the partial payment to Arble the claim of the Interstate Collateral Loan Company was compromised for $250 and that of the South Highland Apartments, Inc., for $212; that there was a fourth claim secured by an assignment and for which an attachment was issued naming Mr. Mercer as garnishee which was compromised by Mercer paying the sum of $650; and that the balance of about $600 was returned by Mercer to Dunbar.

Mr. Mercer, on cross-examination, testified in part with reference to the claim of the Interstate Collateral Loan Company as follows: “I knew when I took the case that there was an assignment, an outstanding claim against anything that might come into my hands and I was in duty bound to see that was taken care of, because the attorney asked me to take care of it...... Q. You never accepted service of the original, did you? *142 A. No, sir, I never accepted it, but I gave my word of honor to Mr. Duff that I would take care of it. Q. You did not give him any written assurance? A. I didn’t need to give him any written assurance, I told him I would look out after his claim if any money came into my hands. I would take care of it or talk to him about it and take care of it to see that the loan was paid, before I knew Dunbar.” There was nothing to indicate an agreement by Mr. Mercer to be bound by the assignment of the Arble claim prior to the time that the balance received from Avey & Irish was placed in Mr. Mercer’s hands by Dunbar.

The court below, in an opinion filed, and the appellee in his argument relied upon the fact that the assignment was a partial assignment not accepted by Mr. Mercer and therefore not enforceable, citing Gordon v. Hartford Sterling Co., 319 Pa. 174, 179 A. 234, and Concrete Form Co. v. W. T. Grange Construction Co., 320 Pa. 205, 181 A. 589. It is well settled that in the case of a partial assignment the debtor is not bound thereby unless he gives his consent but, as we see it, that principle has no application here. We will discuss that feature of the case later.

The court below disposed of the case as a matter of law by directing a verdict for the defendant, and the appellant contends there was involved an issue or issues of fact which should have been submitted to the jury. Our present task is to determine whether plaintiff has a valid cause of action and whether the appellant, if he is correct in his legal position, has produced sufficient evidence to support the claim. As we are convinced that the reasons given in support of the judgment by the court below and the appellee are not sound, it becomes necessary for us to determine first what was the main issue involved and then examine the proofs for the purpose of ascertaining whether they show conclusively a cause of action, a question for the jury, or no cause of *143 action. We will then consider the affirmative defenses raised.

The assignment to Arble was of a claim against Avey & Irish and not of a claim against Mercer. When it was delivered Mercer owed nothing to Dunbar, the assignor. While the paper directed Mercer to withhold any sum he might later receive and pay to Arble $2,142, there was not, at least prior to the receipt of the $2,360 by Mercer from Dunbar, any basis for a claim by Arble against Mercer. Mercer, on receiving notice of the assignment, made no commitments and was not in any way affected by the assignment unless he received the fund. He was attorney for Dunbar and not for Arble. Notwithstanding the Arble assignment, Mercer might have allowed Dunbar to receive the proceeds of the compromise directly from Avey & Irish or, as between Mercer and Dunbar, Dunbar might have paid Mercer his fees and insisted on receiving the money directly from Avey & Irish.

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Related

Concrete Form Co. v. W. T. Grange Construction Co.
181 A. 589 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1935)
Gordon v. Hartford Sterling Co.
179 A. 234 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1935)
Phillips's Estate
55 A. 213 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1903)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
193 A. 479, 128 Pa. Super. 138, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunbar-to-use-v-mercer-pasuperct-1937.