Hunt v. Orr
This text of 246 F. 252 (Hunt v. Orr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This is a suit by Hunt & Co. of Chicago, Ill., to charge Orr, Stark & Collett, a firm of attorneys at law at St. Paul, Minn., and others, as trustees for them of a half interest in a mining property in Northern Minnesota, and for an accounting, upon the ground that the defendant attorneys purchased from them a judgment, while the relation of attorney and client existed, by misrepresenting its value and collectibility, and afterwards used the judgment in acquiring the property in question. The trial court entered a decree for the defendants on the merits, and the plaintiffs appealed.
On January 10, 1911, the defendant attorneys purchased the plaintiffs’ judgment for $275, and took an assignment of it. In the fall of that year, having secured financial aid, and Sauntry having failed to redeem, they utilized their position as judgment creditors by redeeming from the foreclosure sale and prior liens; and eventually, after considerable litigation in the courts of Minnesota, they secured an affirmance of title in them to the Sauntry property. Orr v. Sutton, 119 Minn. 193, 137 N. W. 973, 42 L. R. A. (N. S.) 146; Id., 127 Minn. 37, 148 N. W. 1066, Ann. Cas. 1916C, 527. The property was worth much more than the money they invested. If the case stood as [254]*254at the time the judgment was purchased, there would be grave reason for plaintiffs' contention that the attorneys did not perform the duty imposed by their fiduciary relation of fully and fairly disclosing what they knew of the value and collectibility of the judgment. But two weeks later, January 25, 1911, they wrote the collection agency from which they received the business a letter which we think, taken in connection with the prior correspondence, contained sufficient information. They also offered to surrender the assignment upon a refund of the amount paid for it, plus their fees-in the case. The collection agency advised them that the plaintiffs regarded the matter as closed, and that it did not think it advisable to reopen it. We need not consider whether this letter was an admission of previous fault, and resulted from the wiser counsel of a member of the firm who had not theretofore actively participated in the transaction, or was due to a realization of a greater value of the judgment or to some other cause; for the fact remains that there was an offer to restore the original status, and all the information was given that could reasonably have been required in the relation and the circumstances. In declining the offer the plaintiffs were undoubtedly influenced by the necessity of putting up temporarily over $40,000 to gain the difference of the few hundreds between the amount of their judgment and the amount paid them for it. That necessity was unavoidable, and it was enough to deter them. We put aside what happened at the redemptions about 8 months afterwards. The chance of obtaining title to the valuable property by use of the judgment was too negligible, too remote to be a factor of value. If the large redemption fund were raised, it might have been expected to force the payment of the small judgment by others inter'ested, but more than that was not reasonably conceivable at the time. That it resulted as it did was’ due to a series of errors by those who were dealing too narrowly and technically with Sauntry’s judgment debts.
The decree is affirmed.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
246 F. 252, 158 C.C.A. 412, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunt-v-orr-ca8-1917.