International & Great Northern Railway Co. v. Clark & Dyer

16 S.W. 631, 81 Tex. 48, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1308
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 12, 1891
DocketNo. 7062.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 16 S.W. 631 (International & Great Northern Railway Co. v. Clark & Dyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
International & Great Northern Railway Co. v. Clark & Dyer, 16 S.W. 631, 81 Tex. 48, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1308 (Tex. 1891).

Opinion

COLLARD, Judge, Section A.

This is a suit filed by Clark & Dyer, a firm of lawyers, against the International & Great Northern Railway Company and the Missouri Pacific Railway Company, on May 9,1888, for $5000 due them as a fee for attending to the defense of a suit by Texas Express Company v. International & Great Northern Railway Company in the United States court at Waco. The defense was a general denial.

Clark & Dyer were employed by the International & Great Northern Railway Company to represent them as their attorneys in a suit in equity in the United States Circuit Court at Waco, brought against it by the Texas Express Company to compel the former to carry for it its express matter and messengers. A preliminary injunction was granted requiring the railway company to so transport for the express company at reasonable rates. About the 29th of March, 1881, Clark & Dyer were employed as before stated. In June, 1881, the Missouri Pacific Railway Company leased and took possession of the International & Great Northern Railway and operated the same during the pendency of the litigation, observing the injunction, and doing the carrying for the express company. In 1887 the suit was settled by agreement of the parties, and on May 16,1887, Clark & Dyer were instructed to have the ease dismissed at cost of the complainant and disposed of according to the agreement, which was done, after some delay, in April, 1888. There was no contract made as to the amount of the fee except that a retainer of $100 was to be paid at once, it being impossible at the time of employment to correctly determine what it ought to be. The amount was never agreed on, and this suit was *50 brought on a quantum meruit. The case was tried and resulted in a verdict for plaintiffs for $5000 against both of the defendants, who have appealed.

First assigned error: The court erred in refusing special charge No. 1 asked by defendant, which is as follows:- “The jury are charged that no greater fee would be reasonable against a wealthy man or corporation than a poor man for the same services, and you will not allow the wealth of the parties engaged in the litigation to influence your finding as to what would be a reasonable fee for the services, unless the same 'increased or diminished the burden of the services of the attorney.”

There was no evidence of the wealth of the parties and no issue made upon it. Such a charge as the one asked was held to be proper in the case of Hamman v. Willis & Bro., 62 Texas, 507, but the evidence in that case as to the wealth of the parties rendered the charge applicable. Looking to the original record of that case on file in this court (file number 5232) we see that the wealth of the litigating parties and their great influence was made an issue by the testimony; that there was a plea of non est factum to the note filed in the original suit, and that there was unusual interest in the trial and result of the case on the part of the litigants. The issues authorized the charge in that case, but in this it was not error to refuse it.

Second assigned error: The court erred in refusing special charge ¡No: 2 asked by defendant, as follows: “In determining the amount due by defendant to plaintiffs the jury are not bound by the opinion of the witnesses as to the amount due, unless, in view of all the facts and circumstances of-the litigation, the jury think such opinions are correct.’.’

Another charge was requested by appellant somewhat similar to the foregoing (which was refused by the court), as follows: “The jury are charged that in determining the value of the plaintiffs’ services the jury are not bound by the estimate placed on said services by the expert witnesses; that testimony may be considered by the jury; but if, in the judgment of the jury, the value fixed by said witnesses is not just, they may. find the amount they (the jury) think just and reasonable.”

Alex. White, an attorney who was familiar with all the matters in litigation in the suit of the express company against the railway, and who represented the express company from first to last in the suit and knew what services were rendered by plaintiffs, testified that $5000 to to $7500 would be a reasonable fee. John T. Flint, appointed master in chancery in the -case to take an account between the railway and the express company and ascertain the amount- due the railway for carrying freights for complainant in the original suit pending the injunction, testified that $5000 would be a reasonable and fair fee. *51 Baker, Botts & Baker, who were the general attorneys of the defendants and who retained plaintiffs to defend the suit, when applied to by Clark & Dyer to have the fee fixed and paid at $5000, recommended the amount to their principals as a proper fee. A full history of the case and the services rendered were before the jury. It was their province from all the evidence before them to determine the value of the services; it would not have been proper for the court to comment on the evidence of experts as requested. The charge given by the court was fair and correct. Upon this subject it was in the following language: “In ascertaining the reasonable value of the services of plaintiffs you will consider, the nature of the litigation, the amount involved and the interests at stake, the capacity and fitness of plaintiffs for the required work, the services and labor rendered by plaintiffs, the length of time occupied by them, and the benefit, if any, derived by defendants from the litigation. And you are further instructed to look to all the evidence in the case and to exercise your sound discretion and judgment thereon, and allow plaintiffs such reasonable amount as you may believe they are justly entitled to, not to exceed the amount claimed in their petition.” This charge did not confine the jury to the opinions of experts in considering the amount to be awarded, but left it to the sound discretion of the jury under all the evidence, unimpressed by any opinion of the court.

Fourth error assigned: The court erred in the second clause of the charge in submitting to the jury the question as to whether the Missouri Pacific Railway Company ratified the employment of plaintiffs, because there was no evidence of any ratification.

Briefly and without going into the details of all the elements constituting the fee and the relation of the parties to the suit, it might be well in this connection to make an additional statement of some of the important facts connected with it.

Clark & Dyer were not employed in the case until the preliminary injunction had been granted; they then took charge of the defense and filed an answer. The case was continued under various agreements, and finally it was agreed by the parties or their counsel that it should abide the result of a suit of a similar character pending in the United States Circuit Court at St. Louis, Mo. That case in St.

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Bluebook (online)
16 S.W. 631, 81 Tex. 48, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-great-northern-railway-co-v-clark-dyer-tex-1891.