Holcomb v. Steele

342 S.W.2d 236, 342 S.W.2d 326, 47 Tenn. App. 704, 1958 Tenn. App. LEXIS 149
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 26, 1958
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 342 S.W.2d 236 (Holcomb v. Steele) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holcomb v. Steele, 342 S.W.2d 236, 342 S.W.2d 326, 47 Tenn. App. 704, 1958 Tenn. App. LEXIS 149 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinions

HOWARD, J.

This case was appealed from the Circuit Court of Shelby County to the Western Section of the Court of Appeals, and by consent transferred to the Eastern Section.

The action is not between the original parties to the above styled case, but between Anthony A. Aspero and Nell Sanders Aspero, Attorneys of the Memphis Bar, who filed an intervening petition herein against the plaintiff Mrs. Hazel W. Holcomb, alleging that they were entitled to 50 per cent of a judgment recovered in her favor as an attorney’s fee. They prayed that the money paid into Court in satisfaction of her judgment be impounded until their right? were adjudicated, which prayer was granted, and $4,500.00 of her money was impounded.

The final judgment in the case, entered on the verdict of a jury, denied petitioners’ claim to an attorney’s fee, dismissed their petition, and awarded judgment to Mrs. Holcomb for $305.25 as six per cent interest upon the $4,500 impounded.

Petitioners appealed,'and have assigned errors attacking the merits of the judgment. They have also filed a petition for mandamus to compel the Trial Judge to sign a tendered bill of exceptions which he had previously refused to sign. The questions to be determined may be better understood by a statement of the case and of the unusual pleadings and proceedings shown in the record.

[707]*707The original action arose out of the collision between two automobiles which occurred on the streets of Memphis. One of the cars involved was driven by Mrs. Steele, wife of Harry E. Steele; and the other by Mrs. Elsie Marie Smith, in which Mrs. Hazel W. Holcomb was riding as a guest.

Following the accident Mrs. Smith employed petitioners Aspero and Aspero to represent her in a claim for damages against Mrs. Steele. Thereafter petitioners were also employed by Mrs. Holcomb to represent her claim for damages against Mrs. Steele by written contract which stipulated that they would be allowed 50 per cent of the recovery in excess of medical expenses as a fee for their services. That contract was signed July 22,1954, and pursuant thereto petitioners negotiated with the Insurance Company with which Mrs. Steele had liability insurance and received an offer of settlement of the claim of Mrs. Holcomb for $400, which they recommended that she accept. Thereafter, from time to time until about the middle of December 1954, they urged Mrs. Holcomb to sign the compromise settlement for $400, which she refused to do on the ground that her serious injuries entitled her to a larger amount.

In early December 1954, she became dissatisfied with the services of petitioners and consulted with another attorney, Harry Hubert, of the Memphis Bar, who advised her that she was entitled to recover damages against both Mrs. Steele and Mrs. Smith as joint tort feasors. Mr. Hubert did not at that time accept employment, but agreed to confer with petitioners about the case, which he did.

[708]*708Immediately thereafter petitioners filed in the Circuit Court of Shelby County a suit for Mrs. Holcomb against Mrs. Steele for damages and wrote to Mrs. Holcomb that such suit had been instituted. Thereupon, Mrs. Holcomb employed Mr. Hubert to represent her for the purpose of not only securing a non-suit of the case brought by petitioners, but also to institute a new suit in her behalf against both Mrs. Smith and Mrs. Steele. At the same time Mrs. Holcomb’s husband employed Mr. Hubert to institute suit for him against both of said defendants. Mrs. Holcomb also wrote a letter to petitioners discharging them as her attorneys. Petitioners refused to be discharged, and Mr. Hubert filed petition for Mrs. Holcomb in the suit they had brought, praying an order of the Court discharging them as attorneys for Mrs. Holcomb, alleging that they had been negligent in failing to advise Mrs. Holcomb of her right of action against their client, Mrs. Smith, and failing to promptly institute suit, and in recommending a compromise settlement of Mrs. Holcomb’s claim for $400. The petition also charged that petitioners had solicited employment in violation of the statute, and had represented an adverse interest in violation of law and professional ethics. The petition admitted that petitioners were entitled to compensation on quantum meruit basis, and asked the Court to determine the amount to which they were entitled.

The petition was answered by petitioners, its charges vigorously denied, compensation on quantum meruit refused, and the contract for 50 per cent insisted upon.

Trial was had upon testimony of witnesses before the Honorable Harry Adams, Circuit Judge.

[709]*709At the conclusion of the trial, the Judge ruled that petitioners had the right to stand on their written contract, and tender their services, and dismissed the petition for their discharge.

Testimony of that hearing was preserved by a wayside bill of exceptions, and what further action, if any, was taken in that case, does not appear in the record.

Later, on October 10, 1955, two compromise judgments were entered awarding Mrs. Holcomb $3,000 in her case against Mrs. Steele and $3,000 against Mrs. Smith. A compromise judgment was also entered in the case of Mrs. Holcomb’s husband against said two defendants for $4,000 damages.

Two days later, on October 12, 1955, petitioners filed their intervening petition herein against Mrs. Holcomb, setting out their written contract of employment and alleging that they were entitled to one-half of the judgment recovered by her against Mrs. Steele, with a lien on the funds paid into Court in satisfaction thereof, and for an order impounding the money until their rights were determined as above stated. The petition was answered by Mrs. Holcomb denying the right of petitioners to an attorney’s fee on the same grounds urged in her petition in the other case to discharge them.

Petitioners moved to strike Mrs. Holcomb’s answer from the file on the ground that the defenses plead therein had been adjudicated upon the previous hearing, and that she was estopped by testimony given by her on the hearing.

Upon the hearing of the motion to strike the answer, petitioners also filed and put in evidence the wayside bill [710]*710of exceptions preserved on the hearing of Mrs. Holcomb’s petition to discharge them.

The motion to strike was overruled by the trial judge, and appeal denied. Thereupon, petitioners filed in the Court of Appeals for the Western Section a petition for certiorari and supersedeas alleging that their motion to strike should have been sustained.

The Court of Appeals denied the writ of certiorari, and on review by certiorari the Supreme Court affirmed the action of the Court of Appeals on the ground that res adjudicata and estoppel were pleadable as defenses in bar, but could not be availed of on motion.

Thereafter, petitioners filed in the Circuit Court a replication to the answer of Mrs. Holcomb, pleading res adjudicata and estoppel. They filed two supplemental replications and a special plea of res adjudicata. They also filed a motion to strike parts of the answer of Mrs. Holcomb. The judge sustained that motion in part and struck out from the answer of Mrs. Holcomb the aver-ments relating to liability on quantum meruit basis.

The case was then tried before a jury, and testimony introduced for six days. At the conclusion of the testimony six issues were submitted to the jury, which the jury answered in their verdict as follows:

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Related

Woodruff v. Tomlin
616 F.2d 924 (Sixth Circuit, 1980)
Coleman v. Moody
372 S.W.2d 306 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1963)
Holcomb v. Steele
342 S.W.2d 236 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1958)

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Bluebook (online)
342 S.W.2d 236, 342 S.W.2d 326, 47 Tenn. App. 704, 1958 Tenn. App. LEXIS 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holcomb-v-steele-tennctapp-1958.