Hadley v. Union Trust & Savings Bank

139 N.E. 24, 308 Ill. 175
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 18, 1923
DocketNo. 15093
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 139 N.E. 24 (Hadley v. Union Trust & Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hadley v. Union Trust & Savings Bank, 139 N.E. 24, 308 Ill. 175 (Ill. 1923).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

In an action of assumpsit on the common counts for service's as an attorney and for costs advanced, W. E. Hadley recovered a judgment in the city court of East St. Louis against the Union Trust and Savings Bank for $2510. Upon appeal by the defendant the Appellate Court for the Eourth District reversed this judgment, and, making a finding of facts, rendered judgment against the defendant for $10, costs advanced and admitted to be due the plaintiff. On the petition of the plaintiff a writ of certiorari was issued, and the record has been returned to this court.

The question involved is wholly one of fact, whether the services were rendered under a contract for the employment by the bank of plaintiff in error and W. C. Connett, jointly, for the sum of $500, or under a separate contract to pay the plaintiff in error for his services their reasonable value.

Propositions of law offered to the trial court by the defendant in error were all held in its favor but the findings of fact were against it. These propositions of fact were submitted to the court and answered as indicated:

1. “Did the defendant as one party, and the plaintiff and W. C. Connett as the other parties, agree that plaintiff and W."C. Connett should represent defendant as solicitors in defendant’s foreclosure suit against John C. Hall et al. under an arrangement that plaintiff and Connett were to receive $500 as solicitor’s fee if the defendant had to acquire the property, foreclosed, but to receive whatever amount of solicitor’s fees was allowed in the foreclosure proceedings if the mortgagor redeemed from the foreclosure sale?”
Answer by the court: “Yes.”
2. “If the answer to the above interrogatory is affirma-
tive, was the agreement therein mentioned ever' modified or substituted by any further agreement between plaintiff and defendant ?” ' ■ •
Answer by the court: “Yes.”
3. “If the answer to the above interrogatory is affirmative, did the agreement in modification of substitution of the first agreement provide that the plaintiff was not to prove up solicitor’s fee in the foreclosure suit, and that he was to be paid by the defendant a reasonable fee for his services in the foreclosure suit?”
Answer by the court: “Yes.”
4. “Has the plaintiff, by competent evidence in the record, proven by a preponderance of the evidence that there was a subsequent contract with relation to attorney fees mentioned in the record, and if so, did Paul Schlafly, at the time such subsequent contract was supposed to have been made, have legal authority to represent and bind the defendant bank in such subsequent contract?”
Answer by the court: “Yes.”
The Appellate Court made a finding of facts as follows: “The court finds that the contract under which appellee rendered the services sued for was a contract by which appellant agreed to pay appellee and W. C. Connett $500 for their services in a certain foreclosure suit, but if the court should allow any additional amount for attorneys’ fees as costs and appellant collected it, then said Connett and appellee should have the amount so collected. No such fee was allowed or collected.”

The undisputed facts are, that the defendant in error brought suit in the city court of East St. Louis for the foreclosure of a mortgage and obtained a decree, which was reversed by the Appellate Court for the Fourth District for the reason that a solicitor’s fee for $3000 had been included in the decree in favor of the complainant’s solicitor, who was one of complainant’s directors, and no resolution of the corporation to pay for his services had been adopted. Thereupon the bank decided that its former attorney should have no more to do with the case, and through August Schlafly, its president, employed the plaintiff in error, together with W. C. Connett, who had recently been appointed general counsel of the bank, to take charge of and conduct the case for a fee of $500 and any additional amount which the court might allow and the bank should collect. The cause was re-instated in the city court, evidence was taken before the master, a motion was made by one of the defendants for leave to amend the answer to set up the defense of usury, which was denied by the court, and the cause proceeded to a decree for the full amount of the complainant’s claim, but no effort was made to have a solicitor’s fee taxed in favor of the complainant. There was an appeal to the Appellate Court, which affirmed the decree, and a petition for a writ of certiorari was denied. The litigation being ended, the plaintiff in error presented a bill to the defendant in error for $2500 solicitor’s fees and $10 costs advanced in the Appellate Court. The defendant in error refused to pay it, insisting that it was liable only for the $500 agreed to be paid the plaintiff in error and Connett, since no additional amount had been allowed by the court or collected by the defendant in error.

It is claimed by the plaintiff in error that after the taking of evidence before the master the defendant introduced a contract under- which the defendant in error had become the purchaser of the $50,000 note, secured by the mortgage, for $30,000, and had agreed to accept in payment $35,000 if paid within a certain fixed time, $40,000 if paid at a certain other later date, $45,000 if paid at a date still later, and if not paid until a certain stated time, would require payment in full. It was claimed that in view of thi§ contract the indebtedness secured by the mortgage was affected with usury, and it was to set up this defense that it was desired to amend the answer.

The plaintiff in error testified that he sent for Paul Schlafly, who was the vice-president of the bank and the son of August Schlafly, the president, and told him that the case had been to the Appellate Court once and was going again, — that the defendants would take it up; that when the plaintiff in error went into the case the bank said it would pay him and Connett a $500 fee, and the plaintiff in error had assumed that Connett was chief counsel and would do the work and the plaintiff in error would sort of trail around with him and advise him, but had no idea that he was going to be called upon to do all the work and assume all the responsibility in the case. He told Schlafly that he was not going to assume all the responsibility and do all the work even if he got the whole $500; that he thought it was dangerous to ask the court to allow a solicitor’s fee; that the court had previously allowed a solicitor’s fee of $3500 and the decree was reversed because the solicitor was a director of the bank, and as far as the plaintiff in error knew he was still a director, and the plaintiff in error was his partner, and was doubtful whether or not the Appellate Court, under these conditions, would sustain a fee allowed in this foreclosure suit under the amended bill. He said he was not disturbed about getting a decree for the $50,000 in the state of the pleadings, but he thought that if a solicitor’s fee were allowed there might be danger that the decree would be reversed and the cause sent back, and an amendment might be made to the answer.

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Related

Shaw v. Courtney
53 N.E.2d 432 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1944)
City of Chicago v. Hagley
170 N.E. 689 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
139 N.E. 24, 308 Ill. 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hadley-v-union-trust-savings-bank-ill-1923.