Goldbacher v. United Automobile Service Corp.

100 Pa. Super. 18, 1930 Pa. Super. LEXIS 10
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 1, 1930
DocketAppeal 182
StatusPublished

This text of 100 Pa. Super. 18 (Goldbacher v. United Automobile Service Corp.) 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
Goldbacher v. United Automobile Service Corp., 100 Pa. Super. 18, 1930 Pa. Super. LEXIS 10 (Pa. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

This appeal is by the defendant below from a judgment entered upon a verdict directed against it in an action upon a contract in writing between it and the plaintiff, tried before a jury in the municipal court of the County of Philadelphia. Assignments, one to five inclusive, charge error in excluding certain offers of proof made in behalf of appellant; the sixth and seventh are based upon the direction to.the jury to find in favor of the plaintiff for the amount claimed, and the refusal of a new trial.

*20 In the language of its counsel, appellant is “an automobile service club” and in consideration of the payment of a membership fee “supplies certain services to its members who are owners of automobiles,” including “the services of an attorney to represent the members in matters arising out of the operation of automobiles and to assist [them] in collecting damages occasioned to their automobiles, due to collisions.”

Appellee is a member and active practitioner of the bar of Philadelphia County. The parties entered into a written agreement relative to the rendition by appellee of professional services to the appellant and to its members and the compensation therefor. The original term of the agreement was two years from its date, and we are not concerned in this case with the provisions contemplating a renewal for an additional term of two years.

From an analysis of the contract, we may thus state its material provisions relative to its subject matter and the respective undertakings of the parties. The subject matter was the rendition by appellee of professional services (a) to appellant, itself, as a corporate entity and (b) to its members in their individual capacities. These services, both to appellant and to its members, were divided into two classifications, referred to generally in the contract as (1) “legal advice” and (2) “court work.” The services recited in the preamble as being required on behalf of appellant’s members were described as “legal advice to members of the corporation, and trial of all cases incident thereto, included in the contract between [appellant] and its individual members;” those in behalf of appellant, itself, as “certain legal work,” including “legal advice” in cases in which it, or its members, might be in any way “interested or affected.”

Appellee agreed “to act as attorney and counsel for [appellant] in all matters requiring the services *21 of an attorney in Philadelphia, and its members for the collection of all claims resulting from collisions between motor vehicles and other vehicles for property damage and personal injuries, and in addition thereto......to act in an advisory capacity as general counsel for the period of one year.” The provisions with respect to his compensation were that appellant would pay appellee $1,200 “as a yearly retainer for services”—$100 on the first of each month —for the first year, and $1,800—$150 each month—for the second. That these retainers were not intended by the parties to cover services rendered appellant in the preparation and trial for it of cases in court, or services of any kind rendered its members, is clear from subsequent provisions of the contract. With respect to appellant, it was further provided that in the event it should require the services of appellee “for any litigation requiring court action” it would pay him “such additional fee and expenses as will be commensurate with the services rendered.” The provision with relation to services rendered appellant’s members read: “Should it be necessary for [appellee] to perform any legal services or court work for the members, any charges in such services shall be paid by the members individually, and not by [appellant].”

Appellant paid the retainer for the first year and, after paying $100 early in the second year, notified appellee “that his services would no longer be required.” The suit was for the sum of $1,700 as the balance of the retainer for the second year. Appellee in his statement of claim (after referring to the number of claims placed in his hands by appellant and its members, the number of actions instituted by him in court and their disposition) averred that he had at all times held, and was still holding, himself “in readiness to serve [appellant] and its members according to the terms of the written agreement. ” The execution of the agreement was admitted in the affidavit of de *22 fense and it was not averred that anything had been omitted therefrom by fraud, accident or mistake.

As a defense, appellant pleaded, and sought to establish at the trial, that appellee “contemporaneously with the execution of the written contract” orally agreed that the services which he would render for the annual retainers should include, in addition to those specified in the contract, all the legal services of every kind required by appellant’s members, except the actual trial of cases “before a court of record.” In substance, the defense was that, although it was provided in the written contract that whenever it became necessary for appellee “to perform any legal services or court work for the members” the charges for such services were to be paid by the members individually and not by appellant, appellee orally agreed to represent any member before any magistrate in any civil or criminal proceeding arising from the operation of a motor vehicle, to procure copies of the charges lodged against any member when arrested for violation of any law relative to the operation of motor vehicles and to represent members in the settlement of claims out of court, without making any charge to them for such professional services or any charge to appellant in addition to his retainers. As justification for the dismissal of appellee, appellant set out in its affidavit of defense and offered to prove at the trial that in several instances appellee adjusted, without suit, claims of members for damages suffered by them in automobile accidents and charged them a percentage of the amounts received in settlement; that in one instance a member of appellant was the defendant in an action for damages arising out of the operation of a motor vehicle and that appellee, although he had agreed to represent him, neglected to enter his appearance in time to prevent a judgment by default; and that appellant received numerous complaints from *23 its members relative to the charges made against them by appellee for professional services rendered them.

The first assignment is to the exclusion of an offer to prove by the president of appellant that appellee drew the contract in suit. In our opinion, the contract, as written, was neither ambiguous nor incomplete and it was therefore immaterial to the issue in this case who prepared it; the offer was properly excluded and the assignment is dismissed. The second charges that the trial judge erred in excluding an offer to prove by the same witness the alleged oral agreement outlined above. The ruling reads: “The objection is sustained in so far as it relates to the changing of the contract in writing between the parties.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Gianni v. Russell Co., Inc.
126 A. 791 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1924)
Simon v. Myers
130 A. 256 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1925)
Kent v. Fishblate
93 A. 509 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 Pa. Super. 18, 1930 Pa. Super. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goldbacher-v-united-automobile-service-corp-pasuperct-1930.