Johnson County v. Patterson

267 S.W. 783, 167 Ark. 287, 1925 Ark. LEXIS 20
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 19, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 267 S.W. 783 (Johnson County v. Patterson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson County v. Patterson, 267 S.W. 783, 167 Ark. 287, 1925 Ark. LEXIS 20 (Ark. 1925).

Opinion

Wood, J.

This is an action by the appellees, Basham and Patterson, against the appellant for the sum of $1,015, which claim is bottomed on the following contract:

“As county judge of Johnson County, Arkansas, hereby retain and employ Hugh Basham and G. O. Patterson as attorneys for Johnson County, Arkansas, to represent said county in a claim held against it by the Dixie Culvert Company, and hereby fully authorize, empower and direct my said attorneys to do and perform any and all matters necessary to defend against and defeat said claim. And for their services in that behalf hereby pay untó them the sum of $25 each as a retainer, and further agree that the county of Johnson will also pay said attorneys, in addition to the retainer, a sum equal to one-fourth of the claim held- by said company, for their further services as such attorneys in making defense to said claim in the courts or otherwise. And the said Hugh Basham and G. O. Patterson hereby accept said employment, acknowledge receipt of said sum of $25 retainer, and agree to give to the defense of said claim their best attention. (Signed) C. H. Baskin, county judge of Johnson County, Arkansas.”

The action was instituted by the filing of the claim, duly verified, and exhibiting therewith the above contract. The answer denied that the appellees had rendered any services thereunder, and set up that, prior to August, 1916, the Dixie Culvert Company furnished the appellant certain materials amounting in the aggregate to more than $4,000; that, in August, 1916, road warrants were issued covering the indebtedness, which were subsequently called in by C. H. Baskin, the then county judge, for reissue, which warrants were by him declared fraudulent and canceled on August 11, 1917; that these warrants, at the time of their cancellation, were a valid and subsisting claim against the appellant, but no suit had been instituted against the appellant for the amount thereof; that, approximately eight months after the cancellation of the warrants, the alleged contract of the appellees was signed by the then county judge; that there was no consideration whatever for such contract; that the claim for services growing out of such contract was filed for allowance on April 13, 1923, more than five years after the alleged contract was entered into, and that therefore such claim is barred by the five-year statute of limitation, which appellant pleads.

The testimony of Judge Basham, for the appellees, was to the effect that he was retained by Judge Baskin, county judge of Johnson County, soon after his election in 1916, to recover what Judge Baskin considered a lot of fraudulent scrip that had been issued. He was employed because the prosecuting attorney could not give those matters the attention they needed. Witness’ contract with the county judge was that he was to have one-fourth of the amount recovered, and the resistance of the payment of the warrants that had been issued to the Dixie -Culvert Company was included in his employment. These warrants were identified by the witness, and introduced in evidence. They were drawn on the general road fund, and amounted in the aggregate to the sum of $4,167.62. They were presented to the county court, under an order that had ¡been made by Judge Baskin, calling in all the county scrip for reissue. Each of the warrants had indorsed on its face, “Canceled as fraudulent, August 11, 1917. C. H. Baskin, County Judge.” At the time the warrants were issued, Judge Montgomery was the county judge, and they were issued a short time before his retirement from office, two of them about the close of his term. Witness was employed by Judge Baskin to resist the payment of these and other warrants claimed by him to be fraudulent, because witness had been county judge eight years, and Baskin thought witness was pretty well posted in regard to such -matters, and wanted the services of witness to assist him in resisting payment of what he deemed fraudulent county warrants. Witness ’advised Judge Biaskin that the warrants issued in favor of the Dixie Culvert Company were embraced within his order calling in the county warrants, and that their presentation in obedience to the call gave the county court jurisdiction over the subject-matter, and that the order canceling these warrants was within the court’s jurisdiction. The county judge consulted with witness a number of times during his administration concerning these warrants. The culvert company was talking about bringing suit to 'try to establish and reinstate these warrants that had been declared fraudulent and canceled. Its agent came in a time or two to investigate concerning the reinstatement of these warrants before its right to appeal had expired. Judge Baskin talked to witness concerning it, and witness told him not to bother anything about it until the time for the appeal was up. Witness wanted the time for the appeal by the culvert company to expire, as he feared that a suit might be- brought against the county before the five-year statute of limitation had run. Witness did not consider that the appellees had any claim against the county for the resistance of the payment of these warrants until the expiration of the statute- of limitation. He was holding himself in readiness all the time to defend any suit that might be brought after the five-year statute had run. When the five years expired, witness decided that the fee due him under the contract had been earned, because he claimed these warrants had, at that time, been defeated. Witness was asked if Judge Baskin had entered into a written contract of employment with him, and witness answered that Judge Baskin had informed witness that he had employed Patterson to assist witness in the matter of resisting the claim of the culvert company and signed the written contract on April 21, 1918, supra, which witness identified and introduced in evidence. This contract was executed something like a year and a half after Judge Baskin went into office: It was delivered by the county judge to witness and Patterson and was accepted by them. Witness and Patterson had been ready and willing, at all times since they had been retained by Judge Baskin, to do anything necessary, in witness ’ judgment, to defeat the allowance of the claim, and had advised with the county judge all the time about the matter. No appeal was ever taken from the order of the county court canceling the warrants of the culvert company, and no suit was ever brought. Attorneys on different occasions would come to Clarksville and investigate it, and, upon investigation, decided they didn’t have a case, for some reason, and no- suit was brought. Witness’ contention was .that the claim of the culvert company was barred after five years from the date of the warrants, and absolutely barred at the expiration of one year for appeal from the order of cancellation. Witness didn’t want any suit brought about it until the five years was out, and therefore said very little about it, except in conference with Judge Baskin. Suit was not brought on the contract of employment with witness and Patterson prior to April 13, 1923, because witness didn’t consider their fee was earned until the claim was absolutely barred. Witness’ services were being continuously rendered, but were not fully rendered until that time, and witness didn’t have anything done that might cause the matter to be stirred uo and to cause the culvert company to bring suit until the five-year statute had run. That was witness’ idea of the best way to proceed to defeat the claim.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
267 S.W. 783, 167 Ark. 287, 1925 Ark. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-county-v-patterson-ark-1925.