Garland v. Dimitry

119 So. 42, 167 La. 262, 1928 La. LEXIS 2044
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 2, 1928
DocketNo. 29056.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 119 So. 42 (Garland v. Dimitry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garland v. Dimitry, 119 So. 42, 167 La. 262, 1928 La. LEXIS 2044 (La. 1928).

Opinions

THOMPSON, J.

This is a suit between two reputable members' of the bar, and grows out of a disagreement as to the compensation which the plaintiff was to receive for professional services rendered in the litigation over the estate of the late Mrs. Florence A. Toombs.

It will be necessary to a proper understanding and correct solution of the present controversy to restate some of the history of the litigation referred to, though a full account thereof will be found in the case of Beattie v. Dimitry, 162 La. 571, 110 So. 759.

Mrs. Toombs died about January 7, 1921, without forced heirs and leaving a considerable estate, consisting of movable and immovable property, situated in Caddo parish. Shortly after the death of Mrs. Toombs, Mrs. Marion Beattie presented and caused to be probated what purported to be an olographic will of Mrs. Toombs, in which Mrs. Beattie was- named universal legatee and appointed executrix.

Quite a large number of persons, residing principally in Arkansas and Tennessee, represented themselves to be the legal heirs of Mrs. Toombs and entitled to inherit her estate in the event the will was not valid.

These heirs employed the defendant Dimitry to represent them on a contingent fee basis; that is to say, Dimitry, for his professional services, was to receive one-half of all property or money he recovered out of the estate for the heirs, and was to assume and pay all cost and expenses incurred in recovering the property.

Mrs. Beattie, the executrix, caused certain property belonging to the estate to be sold to pay debts and to discharge a special legacy contained in the will, after which she filed a final account.

In opposition to this account, Dimitry, on behalf of the heirs, set up the nullity of the will on the ground that it was not written, dated, and signed by Mrs. Toombs. Thereafter negotiations were entered into between Dimitry and the attorneys for Mrs. Beattie, looking toward a compromise, and which finally resulted in an agreement by which *265 Mrs. Beattie was to pay the heirs $50,000 in consideration of their renouncing all interest in the estate. The agreement failed by reason of the fact that Mrs. Beattie could not raise the money.

Thereupon an agreement was consummated in which Mrs. Beattie renounced all rights to the estate of Sirs. Toombs under the will and resigned the trust as executrix, and purchased all of the real estate for the sum of $50,000, represented by one note, payable in six months and secured by a mortgage on the property.

The mortgage note for $50,000 was negotiated by Dimitry with one Charles Schneidau for $25,000 cash and the latter’s personal note for $2.3,000.

A petition was then filed by Mr. Dimitry, in which it was alleged that Mrs. Beattie had renounced all rights under the will and had resigned as executrix, and asked that the heirs be sent into possession of the estate. Whereupon Mrs. Beattie caused to be recorded a revocation of her renunciation, and filed a rule against the heirs to have the judgment sending them into possession set aside.

A trial of this rule resulted in a judgment setting aside the order putting the heirs in possession.

About this time Mrs. Beattie changed counsel, and, through new counsel, filed a suit against Dimitry in which it was alleged that Dimitry, Barnett, and Harrington had entered into a conspiracy to defraud her, and had obtained her signature to the renunciation and to the mortgage and note for $50,000 by threatening to prosecute her for having forged the will of Mrs. Toombs. She prayed that the renunciation, notes, deed, and mortgage be canceled, and for $10,000 damages caused by the fraudulent conspiracy between Dimitry, Harrington, and Barnett.

In answer to this suit, Dimitry, on behalf of himself and the heirs, and the other two counsel on their own behalf, denied the charges of conspiracy, and prayed that the suit be dismissed. It was again charged by Dimitry that the purported will was not written by Mrs. Toombs.

The record shows that up to this time numerous suits, motions, exceptions, and pleas had been filed in connection with the succession of Mrs. Toombs, and that Dimitry alone represented the heirs, except such assistance as was rendered by the attorney who had been appointed to represent absent heirs.

Some time in the month of April, 1925, Dimitry employed the plaintiff, Garland, to bring suit in his behalf against Joseph H. Levy and Clifton Davis for slander, growing out of the suit filed by them on 'behalf of Mrs. Beattie, charging Dimitry and others with conspiring to defraud her. Later Dimitry associated Garland with him in the suit brought by Mrs. Beattie to set aside the compromise or settlement made with the heirs.

Thereafter-Garland assumed the position of leading,counsel, and practically controlled the management of the case, though the real issues had been formed, the foundation laid, and practically all of the evidence had been secured by Dimitry before Garland’s entry into the case.

At the time of Garland’s employment, the controversy between Mrs. Beattie and the heirs of Mrs. Toombs had been resolved into two vital questions: First, the validity of the transaction by which Mrs. Beattie had renounced her rights under the will, and the purchase by her of the property at $50,000; and, second, the genuineness of the will under which Mrs. Beattie claimed.

In connection with that case, the plaintiff, Garland, was also employed by Schneidau, who became a party to the suit as holder of the note for $5(1,000, which was sought by Mrs. Beattie to have decreed null.

It was perfectly obvious at that time that, if the compromise was maintained, the heirs of Mrs. Toombs would realize nothing but *267 tlje proceeds of the $50,000 note negotiated by Dimitry with Schneidau. On the other hand, if the compromise was set aside and the will was annulled, then the heirs would receive the entire estate.

The trial of the case was had before a jury, beginning November 16, 1925, and ending February 13, 1936, with a verdict setting aside the renunciation made by Mrs. Beattie and annulling the note and mortgage which she had executed in favor of the heirs of Mrs. Toombs for $50,000.

There was also a verdict in favor of the defendants, declaring the will to be a forgery. The verdict was approved by the trial judge, and on appeal to this court the verdict and judgment were affirmed, and the heirs of Mrs. Toombs were sent into possession of the estate.

While the cases were pending in this court, and before final submission, the present suit was filed.

The plaintiff contends that under a verbal contract with Dimitry, made at the time he was employed, he was to receive one-half of the net amount received by Dimitry from the heirs. On the other hand, defendant Dimitry claims that there was never any agreement as to fees until January 5, 1926, when, at the instance and insistence of Garland, he signed the letter addressed to Garland, which we shall refer to later, and which Dimitry claims constitutes the only contract with reference to the fee made by him with Garland.

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Bluebook (online)
119 So. 42, 167 La. 262, 1928 La. LEXIS 2044, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garland-v-dimitry-la-1928.