Hornish v. McConnell

191 Iowa 308
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 6, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 191 Iowa 308 (Hornish v. McConnell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hornish v. McConnell, 191 Iowa 308 (iowa 1921).

Opinion

Weaver, J.

i attorney awd tracTfor Cem-pioyment: proof. In the year 1896, one Mary W. Brown, now deceased, held a promissory note for the sum of $1,921.25 against H. N^Bostwiek. The note was past due and unpaid, On the ¿ate named, the plaintiff herein was an attorney at law, practicing his profession at Keokuk, Iowa. On May 4, 1896, Mrs. Brown placed the note in the hands of plaintiff for collection, taking his receipt therefor. While the evidence in some respects is meager, it is fairly inferable therefrom that the debtor, Bost-wick, was then a resident of Colorado, but was without assets which could be subjected to the payment of the debt. Correspondence was opened between the' plaintiff and the firm of Black & Catlin, Colorado attorneys, concerning the collection of the note, and the paper was forwarded to the latter for that purpose, in response to a proposition made by them to collect it, if practicable, three fifths of such collection to belong to Brown, and the other two fifths to be equally divided between Black & [310]*310Catlin, as a firm, and tbe plaintiff, for their services. Bost-wick ’s life had been insured in the Connecticut Mutual Company for the sum of $7,000, payable to H. Shirley Bostwick and Eudora A. Badger. On November 23, 1896, Black & Catlin obtained the written agreement of Bostwick and the beneficiaries of said insurance that Bostwick would keep up the premiums accruing thereon during the remainder of his life, and that, at his death, $2,000 of the moneys realized upon said policy should be paid to Mrs. Brown upon the note above mentioned, and the unpaid remainder should stand as a charge against the maker’s estate. This agreement was made upon consideration that Mrs. Brown should not, during Bostwick’s life, undertake to enforce payment of the latter’s debt. To effect this purpose, the beneficiaries of the policy delivered to Black & Catlin an assignment thereof, to the extent of $2,000. This agreement and assignment were put in evidence on the trial, and it bears upon its face Brown’s written acceptance of its terms. Bostwick died January 15, 1919, and shortly thereafter, Black & Catlin assigned their claims under said contracts to the plaintiff, Hornish. Mary W. Brown died testate in 1905, and the defendant herein, Lillian McConnell, is the executrix of her will and trustee of her estate. The insurance company has paid the amount of the Bostwick policy into court, to be paid over to the party or parties to whom the court shall find that it properly belongs. The trial court found and adjudged that plaintiff wrns entitled tft receive from said insurance fund the sum of $800.

Appellant, in argument, insists that the judgment below is wholly without support in the evidence. In this view of the record we cannot concur. It appears without substantial dispute that Mary Brown employed plaintiff as her attorney to collect the Bostwick note. To say nothing of other testimony to this fact, the defendant, as executrix or trustee of the Brown estate, produced on the trial the receipt given by plaintiff in evidence of that transaction, and, in her inventory of the estate, the executrix describes the note as being in the plaintiff’s hands, and secured to the extent of $2,000 by assignment of insurance policy. That the plaintiff associated with him in making such collection the Colorado attorneys, Black & Catlin, is also clearly and indisputably shown; and, pursuant to such association, [311]*311Black & Catlin obtained an assignment of tbe Bostwiek life insurance policy, to secure tbe payment therefrom of tbe sum of $2,000 upon the note at Bostwiek’s death. That this agreement or assignment was authorized or ratified by Mary Brown is shown by her written consent, indorsed thereon, as well as by her subsequent conduct in leaving the papers in the hands of her said attorneys until Bostwiek’s death, more than 20 years later.

There is no suggestion or pretense on appellant’s part that, as a matter of fact, plaintiff was not employed by Brown to collect this note, or that Black & Catlin were not associated with him in attending to that business, or that the security for the payment of the note to the extent of $2,000 was not obtained by their effort, or that such security has not been realized upon to that full amount in the deposit now in the hands of the court for distribution to the party or parties to whom it justly and equitably belongs. There is no pretense that these services have ever been paid for or in any manner compensated. By assignment to him of Black & Catlin’s claim, plaintiff is entitled to payment for all the services of counsel in that behalf, and it would ill become a court of law or equity to hold that he is remediless.

But it is insisted that there is no competent evidence that Mary Brown ever consented to payment of a collection fee of two fifths of the sum recovered, and there is no claim or proof on the theory of a quantum meruit. It is shown that, in the preliminary correspondence which resulted in the employment of the services of Black & Catlin, they wrote to plaintiff, on April 27, 1896, that they would be willing to take hold of the matter ‘ ‘ on this basis: the owner of the note to get three fifths of whatever is realized, you one fifth, we one fifth;” and that, in response to this proposition, the note was forwarded to them. It is true that no witness testifies to the express knowledge by Brown of this understanding, or to her express consent thereto. It does sufficiently appear that she knew that Bostwiek lived in a distant state, and must have known that plaintiff was acting in conjunction with counsel in that jurisdiction in bringing about the arrangement which she approved, for taking an assignment as security to the extent of $2,000, and postponing [312]*312tbe enforcement of tbe obligation until Bostwick’s death. There is not tbe slightest reason indicated for a suspicion that, in approving and accepting this plan of settlement, Brown wa's deceived or misled by her counsel, or that they withheld or suppressed any of the facts connected with it. In the absence of any charge or proof of fraud, the presumption of good faith must obtain. Knowing, as she must have known, that plaintiff, as her local representative, must, or at least might, properly ■enlist’ the services of other counsel in Colorado, she impliedly authorized him to employ such assistance on such reasonable terms as he found necessary to accomplish the end for which she engaged his services. That she did know that plaintiff employed Black & Catlin for this purpose cannot be doubted; and, if there be any reason why she did not become bound by the terms of such employment, it does not appear in the record. If she were now living, and defending against this claim, it would be incumbent-on her, upon the showing here made, to plead and prove affirmatively some fact or facts relieving her from the obligation so entered into in her behalf; and the executrix or trustee of her estate cannot assert any defense which would not ■have been available to her, were she living and in court.

‘ ekko®: reserva-insufficient reo There is, however, testimony of a direct character tending to show that she did know of the terms of the agreement with Black & Catlin. This testimony is challenged by the defendant because of the alleged ineompetency of the witness; and that the situation may be made clear, we turn to the record as it appears m the abstract. Plaintiff, being duly sworn as a witness, was asked: ‘ ‘ Q.

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191 Iowa 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hornish-v-mcconnell-iowa-1921.