Foltz v. Cogswell

25 P. 60, 86 Cal. 542, 1890 Cal. LEXIS 1064
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 29, 1890
DocketNo. 12787
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 25 P. 60 (Foltz v. Cogswell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Foltz v. Cogswell, 25 P. 60, 86 Cal. 542, 1890 Cal. LEXIS 1064 (Cal. 1890).

Opinion

Works, J.

— This cause was submitted in Department Two, and the following opinion prepared by Gibson, 0.: —

“Assumpsit to recover for services rendered as an attorney and counselor at law.
“Plaintiff alleges, in her complaint, that, between the twenty-seventh day of January, 1883, and the ninth day of March, 1883, at the special instance and request of defendant, who promised to fully pay her for her professional services, ‘to wit, the sum of five thousand dollars/ she devoted her entire time and skill as a lawyer in the preparation of an act entitled ‘ An act authorizing and empowering the regents of the University of California to convey certain lands/ designed to enable the defendant to obtain from said regents a reconveyance of certain real property in San Francisco that he had donated to the university, and in making the legislature acquainted with her bill, and in making arguments before the various committees of that body, in order that the justice and merits of defendant’s demand for the passage of the bill might be fully understood, all of which services resulted in the passage of the bill into a law, entitled as above, on the ninth day of March, 1883; that between the latter date and March 17, 1885, she counseled with and advised defendant as to various legal questions concerning the property, and prepared for and submitted to the regents of the university written arguments in relation to the same property; that on the date last mea[546]*546tioned defendant gave her notice that her services were no longer desired; that all of the said services rendered to defendant were and are reasonably worth five thousand dollars, no part of which has been paid.
“Defendant in his answer denies any agreement for any sum greater than two hundred dollars for her professional services; and avers that on December 12,1882, plaintiff contracted with defendant to perform all the services mentioned in the complaint, and, in addition, to conduct and prosecute a suit then intended to be commenced against the regents of the university to recover the property referred to in the complaint, through the trial and appellate courts, for the sum of two hundred dollars; that all the services ever performed by plaintiff were pursuant to her own judgment as a lawyer, and in accordance with said agreement; and as a further defense, that, long before the present action was commenced, defendant paid plaintiff in full for all services performed by her for him.
“The jury, upon the issues thus presented, rendered a verdict for plaintiff for $1,450. From the judgment entered thereon, and an order refusing a new trial, defendant appeals.
“The appellant asserts that the claim of plaintiff is based upon an express contract for the sum demanded for her services, and that it was error to admit evidence in support of a demand upon a quantum meruit. The complaint, it is true, states in one place that she was to be fully paid for her services, to wit, five thousand dollars; but, reading the complaint as a whole, the substance of which we have set out above, we think it clearly shows that the action is upon an implied contract for the reasonable value of her services, alleged to be reasonably worth the sum demanded, and not upon an express contract for that sum. This contraction was properly given to it by the trial court, and the evidence in support of it was admissible.
[547]*547“Appellant in his answer does not deny that the services for which respondent seeks to recover were rendered substantially as alleged, but avers that they were rendered pursuant to an express contract, by the terms of which she was to receive and did receive two hundred dollars, and that all services rendered by her were fully paid for.
“The contract referred to was, in effect, as above set forth in the substance of defendant’s answer. But after visiting Sacramento, where the legislature was then in session, the respondent testifies that she found that she could not spend the time necessary to procure the passage of the act desired by the defendant, and upon returning to San Francisco and informing him of that fact, he urged her to return to Sacramento and remain until the act was passed, believing that she could accomplish it, and agreed to pay her well for her services. She said they would be worth five thousand dollars; he did not assent to this amount, but assured her that she would be fully compensated. There is sufficient testimony in the record, aside from that of the plaintiff’s, strongly tending to establish this agreement, and to show that it took the place of the original written contract.
“It is admitted, in the answer, that plaintiff, between the 27th of January, 1883, and the 9th of March, 1883, ‘ devoted some time and her professional skill, ability, and learning’ in acquainting the legislature and its committees with the merits of the act that defendant desired, which resulted in the passage of the act on the date last mentioned, and that since the date last referred to, at divers times and occasions, and prior to September 14, 1883, after which date defendant refused to accept any further services from her, she counseled with and advised defendant in relation to the property he was seeking to regain from the regents of the university, and prepared written arguments concerning the same prop[548]*548erty, and sent the same before the said regents, but denies that the latter were sent before said regents until April 10,1884, about seven months after defendant had refused to accept any further professional services from her.
“There is testimony tending to prove that she prepared the bill, which afterward became a law, and made arguments in support of it, and caused it to be introduced in both departments of the legislature, appeared and argued the measure before at least one committee of that body, and also before the governor when the bill reached his hands for consideration;' and further, that the written arguments she sent before the regents of the university after the passage of the act were sent before she was informed by defendant that he no longer required her professional services; and according to her own testimony and that of another witness, the services she so rendered were of a greater value than the amount awarded by the jury. The only expert witness called for defendant on this point placed the value as high as one thousand dollars.
“Therefore we do not feel justified in disturbing the verdict, unless, as claimed by defendant, the agreement relied upon by plaintiff was an agreement for compensation contingent upon success, and consequently void as against public policy.
“A sufficient answer to this objection is, that a careful review of the testimony fails to show, nor can it be fairly inferred therefrom, that plaintiff's compensation depended solely upon her success in obtaining the passage of the act. She, it is true, insisted in her testimony that she was to and should receive five thousand dollars for her services, and when the act became a law, she demanded that amount, but there is not a word indicating that, in the event of her failure to secure the passage of the act, she should receive nothing for her services; consequently, we cannot say that she was to be compensated only in the event of success.
[549]

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Bluebook (online)
25 P. 60, 86 Cal. 542, 1890 Cal. LEXIS 1064, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foltz-v-cogswell-cal-1890.