Fletcher v. Kellogg

263 P. 1048, 125 Kan. 330, 1928 Kan. LEXIS 325
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedFebruary 11, 1928
DocketNo. 27,883
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 263 P. 1048 (Fletcher v. Kellogg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fletcher v. Kellogg, 263 P. 1048, 125 Kan. 330, 1928 Kan. LEXIS 325 (kan 1928).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Johnston, C. J.;

The question to be considered in this action relates to the application of the rule of res adjudícala to the facts set ■ forth in plaintiff’s petition. Edmond C. Fletcher brought an action against Percy L. Kellogg, as executor of the estate of Sherman Kellogg, deceased, to recover $31,103.70 for legal services rendered to Sherman Kellogg in his lifetime and for certain expenses incurred in connection with those services. He filed a petition in the probate court of Johnson county setting up his claims and asking for an allowance, but that court sustained a demurrer to his pleading and disallowed his claim. An appeal was taken to the district court, where a demurrer of defendant to plaintiff’s petition was sustained [331]*331apparently upon the ground that the matters involved had been adjudicated in a prior action between the same parties. Plaintiff assigns error on that ruling.

The petition is a voluminous pleading of fifty-four pages, containing much argumentative matter with citations of decisions. From the averments therein it appears that William Pitt Kellogg, a resident of the District of Columbia, died testate on August 10, 1918, and in his will Sherman Kellogg, a resident of Kansas, was made a devisee and residuary legatee. Sherman Kellogg, desiring to contest an item of the will which affected the residuary estate and the money and property which would come to him, entered into a contract with the plaintiff, who was practicing law in the courts of the .District of Columbia, to contest the item of the will mentioned upon a contingent basis, which provided that fees should only be paid out of the excess of the money or property recovered over and above that expressly given in the will.

Under the employment plaintiff brought a series of actions without success in the courts of the District of Columbia to annul an • item of the will and to protect the interest of Sherman Kellogg in the estate of his deceased brother. Kellogg became dissatisfied because nothing was being accomplished in the steps taken in his behalf, wrote plaintiff canceling the contract and stating that he did not desire any further steps to be taken by plaintiff with reference to the estate. In the same connection he asked for a statement of the moneys plaintiff had collected out of the estate.-

The plaintiff at first contested the right of Kellogg to discharge him and also his right to discontinue pending actions, but it is alleged in the present action that plaintiff then elected to treat the contract of employment as canceled and rescinded, and has since claimed the right to recover the reasonable value of the services previously rendered as upon quantum meruit, together with, all expenses incurred by plaintiff in connection with his services. ■ He further alleged that he waived all claims for damages which he might have claimed against Kellogg by reason of the breach of the contract of employment.

Later Kellogg brought an action against plaintiff in the District of Columbia for an accounting and for equitable relief as to numerous charges of indebtedness in dispute between the parties. To Kellogg’s petition the plaintiff filed an answer and counterclaim, in which he asked for reasonable compensation as upon a quantum meruit for the work and labor he had done in behalf of the plaintiff [332]*332in thé several actions brought before and after his discharge. Kellogg joined issue with plaintiff on his counterclaim, denying indebtedness and making specific denials as to certain allegations with respect to services rendered. The issues of the case were referred to an auditor upon whose findings judgment was entered in favor of Kellogg for $1,574.45, and the court also decreed the cancellation of a certain note and enjoined plaintiff from prosecuting an action brought for the collection of that note.

An appeal was taken from that judgment to the court of appeals of the District of Columbia, and it was there affirmed. (Fletcher v. Kellogg, 6 F. 2d, 476.) The plaintiff undertook to obtain a review of the case in the supreme court of the United States, but that court on October 12, 1925, denied plaintiff’s petition for a writ of certiorari, and the judgment has become a finality. It appears that Sherman Kellogg died during the pendency of that appeal, and the executor of the estate was substituted as defendant, and the present action was brought against the executor.

By the record it is clear that the issues involved in the first action were identical with those pleaded in the second. There was identity of parties, identity of the cause of action and of the relief demanded, and'identity of the facts essential to maintain the action, and the judgment in the first action was rendered by a court of unquestioned jurisdiction. Plaintiff contends that the judgment in the first action was void and therefore subject to collateral attack. It is said that the court did not have the power or jurisdiction which it assumed to exercise, and that the judgment was not responsive to the pleadings and proof and is therefore void. As already stated, the plaintiff in the first action asked for the reasonable value of the services rendered on the basis of quantum meruit, as he has done in the present action. Defendant met the claim by a reply which expressly brought that claim in issue. The cause was referred to the auditor of the court with the direction to ascertain and report the nature and extent of the legal services claimed to have been rendered, together with the time and labor devoted to that purpose, and also to find the reasonable value of the services actually rendered for and in behalf of Kellogg in certain proceedings, which were enumerated, upon which plaintiff’s claim was based, and also to find what money plaintiff had expended in that behalf, together with his expenses incurred in the proceedings. Upon the evidence produced, the auditor made findings and reported, and upon these the judg[333]*333ment was entered. It is argued that the court, in entering judgment and in the review by the appellate court, did not mention the plaintiff’s counterclaim nor state that his claim was based on quantum meruit, but did refer to his contract of employment which had been canceled by Kellogg. The failure to mention in detail the pleadings by which the issues were joined was not important nor was such mention necessary, and the reference to the contract of employment and its cancellation was evidently stated as a part of the history of the case with a view of showing the relation of the parties and the basis of the claim for the services performed as upon the quantum meruit, and to ascertain therefrom if any liability arose for those services. The fact that the court did not refer in terms to the case as one on quantum meruit does not argue that the nature of the cause was not understood or considered. Doubtless there were other rules and terms applied in the consideration of the case, that went unmentioned. The nature of the cause of action was distinctly pleaded and the ground of relief not open to dispute, and there was no occasion for extended comment in that respect. In the opinion of the court of appeals it is stated that the action was brought for an accounting between the parties, and after relating the making of the contract and its cancellation, the court referred to the fact that plaintiff denied the right of Kellogg to cancel unless he was paid $25,000 for the services rendered. The court then stated:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
263 P. 1048, 125 Kan. 330, 1928 Kan. LEXIS 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fletcher-v-kellogg-kan-1928.