Gordon v. City of Omaha

110 N.W. 313, 77 Neb. 556, 1906 Neb. LEXIS 122
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1906
DocketNo. 14,311
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 110 N.W. 313 (Gordon v. City of Omaha) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gordon v. City of Omaha, 110 N.W. 313, 77 Neb. 556, 1906 Neb. LEXIS 122 (Neb. 1906).

Opinion

Duffie, C.

By tbe judgment of the district court for Douglas county entered July 5, 1902, Prank E. Moores, mayor of tbe city of Omaha, was directed to sign a certain warrant, No. 53,327, for the sum of $1,600, payable to Samuel I. Gordon, and drawn by tbe comptroller of tbe city in part payment of the salary of said Gordon as police judge of tbe city of Omaha for tbe year 1901. Tbe judgment of the. district court was, on appeal taken by tbe mayor, affirmed by this court, and the warrant. thereafter duly executed. [557]*557J. W. Eller represented Judge Gordon as his attorney in that case, and on or about April 14, 1903, the warrant was delivered to Eller, Avho receipted the same as attorney for Gordon and who obtained the money thereon from the city treasurer. These facts are alleged in the petition filed in this case, and it is further alleged that on January 24, 1903, the said Samuel I. Gordon sold and assigned to the plaintiff all his right, title and interest in and to the saiui of $2,500, due to him for salary as police judge of the city of Omaha for the year 1901, to be held by him as security for the payment of certain debts of the said Samuel I. Gordon, an itemized statement of which is set forth in the petition. It is further alleged that, before Eller presented the warrant for payment, plaintiff notified Eller of the assignment to him, and that he also notified the city treasurer that the said salary due to Judge Gordon, and which was in part evidenced by said warrant No. 53,327, had been sold and assigned to the plaintiff, who was the only party entitled to receive payment thereon. Judgment is prayed against the city for the amount of said warrant with interest. The answer alleges Eller’s employment as attorney for Judge Gordon in the mandamus proceeding brought to require the mayor to sign and deliver the warrant, and in numerous other cases in which Gordon was a party, and that there was due him as fees for services rendered said Gordon in his various suits a sum largely in excess of the amount of the warrant; that it was agreed between Judge Gordon and Eller that the latter should hold and collect the warrant and apply the same upon fees due him for legal services. It is also alleged in the answer that Eller was the attorney of record for Judge Gordon in the district and supreme courts in the case involving the issue of said warrant, and so remained until April 27, 1904, and that as such attorney he was authorized to receive and receipt for the same. The reply denies that Eller remained the attorney of said Gordon or had any power to receipt for said warrant, and alleges the assign[558]*558ment to him at a date long previous to the payment of the same to Eller. It reiterates the allegation of the petition that the city treasurer had notice that the warrant and the debt had been assigned to the plaintiff before the same was presented for payment by Eller, and it denies any indebtedness from Judge Gordon to Eller on account of legal services. The record discloses that a jury was impaneled and sworn, and that the evidence was in part adduced, when defendant objected to any further evidence being admitted, on the ground that the petition did not state a cause of action. The district court sustained this objection and, on motion duly made, directed the jury to return a verdict for the defendant, which was accordingly done. The motion for a new trial was overruled, and judgment entered upon the verdict that the city of Omaha go hence without day, and have and recover from the plaintiff its costs.

If Eller, as attorney for Judge Gordon, had no authority to receive and receipt for the warrant in question, and to obtain the money thereon, then it is evident that some one is still indebted to the legal owner of the warrant for the amount thereof. Section 8606, Ann. St., provides,.among other matters, that an attorney has power “to receive money, claimed by his client in an action or proceeding, during the pendency thereof or afterwards, unless he has been previously discharged by his client, and upon payment thereof, and not otherwise, to discharge the claim or acknowledge satisfaction of the judgment.” This statute is merely declaratory of the common law. The authorities are numerous and uniform that an attorney, by virtue of his retainer, may receive his client’s money in a case in which he is employed, and the act will bind his client, unless the party paying it had notice of a revocation of the attorney’s authority to act in the case. Ruckman v. Alwood, 44 Ill. 188; McGill v. McGill, 59 Ky. 258; State v. Hawkins, 28 Mo. 366; Yoakum v. Tilden, 3 W. Va. 167, 100 Am. Dec. 738. It is admitted that Eller was attorney of record for Judge [559]*559Gordon, and, under onr statute and tbe decisions above referred to, be had authority to receive this warrant and collect the money thereon, unless previously discharged by Gordon and notice thereof brought home to the city. Judgment having gone in favor of the city on a demurrer ore tenus interposed to the petition, we must assume the truth of the allegation that notice of the assignment of this warrant to the plaintiff was given to the city treasurer before its payment. An assignment of a judgment is a revocation of the authority of the plaintiff’s attorney to receive and receipt for the money due thereon, or to in any wise control the judgment. If the plaintiff in a judgment has parted with his right to control it by assigning it to a third party, it cannot be questioned that the power of his attorney ceased with such assignment, and that all parties in interest having notice thereon deal with the attorney thereafter in relation to the judgment at their peril. Trumbull v. Nicholson, 27 Ill. 149. This requires us to determine whether notice to the city treasurer of the assignment of the warrant, or rather the salary represented by the warrant, was notice to the city, no plea of any other notice being alleged in the petition, or of any facts from which notice might be inferred, such as an assignment on the record, or an entry or notice of record of Eller’s discharge as attorney in the case. One of the provisions of the Omaha charter is in the following language : “The corporate name of each city organized under or governed by this act, shall be ‘The City of-’ and all or every process or notice whatever, affecting any such city,.shall be served upon the mayor, or acting mayor, or in the absence of both of said officers from the city, then upon the city clerk.” Ann. St., sec. 7453. This statute undoubtedly contemplates a written notice, and it certainly requires notice to the executive head of the city, or, in his absence, to the clerk. No notice of the kind required by statute is pleaded, and we cannot judicially change or amend the statute by holding that notice to any other officer than the one mentioned in the statute [560]*560is sufficient. We conclude, therefore, that the allegations of the petition, if established, would not entitle the plaintiff to a judgment.

Complaint is made, as we understand from the appellant’s brief, that the court directed a verdict and entered judgment thereon instead of dismissing the jury and the plaintiff’s action. This requires us to consider what order should be entered on sustaining a demurrer ore terms to the plaintiff’s petition. The rule is well established that an objection to the admission of any evidence on the ground that the petition fails to state a cause of action may be taken at any time during the progress of the trial, and is not waived by answer or failure to demur. Curtis & Co. v. Cutler, 7 Neb. 315; Ball v. LaClair, 17 Neb. 39.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
110 N.W. 313, 77 Neb. 556, 1906 Neb. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-v-city-of-omaha-neb-1906.