Jones v. Pettingill

245 F. 269, 157 C.C.A. 461, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1478
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJuly 16, 1917
DocketNo. 1173
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 245 F. 269 (Jones v. Pettingill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Pettingill, 245 F. 269, 157 C.C.A. 461, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1478 (1st Cir. 1917).

Opinion

DODGE, Circuit Judge.

The rights asserted by the appellees, plaintiffs in the District Court, are based upon a contract in writing, made at Ponce, March 20, 1905, between them and Adelaida Olivieri. Her agreements were as follows:

“I agree to pay to Messrs. Pettingill and Leake, my lawyers, the half of what I may receive if the judgment of the court is favorable in a suit which I am going to bring in the Federal Court against Antonio Olivieri, executor of Felix Olivieri, if said lawyers pay all the costs and expenses of said suit, and carry it to a conclusion, in case of settlement the lawyers shall receive the half of whatever sum is paid to me in settlement of their fees. In accordance with the judgment of the court, I will pay to them and divide with them in proportion of one-half of whatever I may receive by order of the court.”

Their agreements were as follows:

“We agree to bring this suit in favor of [said Adelaida], paying all costs and expenses, and carrying it to a conclusion, either by settlement or judgment of the court.”

The final clause of the contract, to which both the parties subscribed, was as follows:

' “Moreover it is agreed that, in case of settlement by agreement, such settlement shall not be valid, if not made in the presence and with the consent and assistance of ihe two parties to this contract.”

[272]*272Felix Olivieri, referred to in the agreement, was Adelaida Olivieri’s father. The contemplated suit against his executor was brought and carried to a conclusion by Pettingill and Leake, in accordance with the agreement. In it she claimed one-ninth of his real estate as his heir; also a legacy of $5,000 given her, and charged upon his real estate, by his will. The final judgment of the court, rendered May 18, 1910, was in her favor. She was adjudged to be owner of one-ninth of her father’s interest in a coffee plantation called Limón, and entitled also to a charge upon the whole of his said interest in the sum of $5,000.

The above litigation, carried on in the Federal District Court for Porto Rico, involved the appointment of a receiver, who took custody of the Olivieri estate, including so much of the Limón property as is here in controversy. This, although Olivieri did not own it, he was occupying at the time of his death under a “lease and obligation of purchase and sale,” made between him and certain Alvarados, its owners, October 24, 1900, to expire July 31, 1908. As is further stated below, there was an attempt during said litigation to deal with this as if it had in fact belonged to the Olivieri estate subject to a mortgage in favor of the Alvarados.

Pending said litigation, and while said property was in the receiver’á custody, Jones acquired from the Alvarados all their rights in it. Later, after the above final decision, he also' bought from Adelaida Olivieri all her interest in it and in the legacy charged upon her father’s estate in her favor, according to said decision. In these acquisitions one A. B. Marvin was ’associated with him, but Marvin need not be further referred to; Jones having since become sole owner of whatever they both so acquired.

The present suit was brought by the plaintiffs in the Federal District Court for Porto Rico, July 16, 1910. Adelaida Olivieri, her husband, Jones, and Marvin were made defendants. We are now concerned only with the relief sought against Jones. Alleging that the rights in Limon acquired by him as above from Adelaida Olivieri had been acquired with notice of their above contract with her, they asked that he be enjoined from transferring what he had so acquired; that they be decreed to be “the equitable owners of an undivided half interest in and to” said $5,000 charge upon Limón; that “the attempted cession and assignment thereof” by her to Jones be declared “fraudulent, and void” as against them; that they be decreed entitled to a cession of Jones’ rights acquired from the Alvarados, as above, upon the same terms upon which Jones acquired them, or upon payment of the amount legally due thereon ; that Jones be ordered to make such cession upon payment tendered ; and for specific performance of their above contract with Adelaida Olivieri.

[1] The plaintiff Leake died in April, 1912, after the present bill had been filed, but before the entry of any decree in the suit. No- executor or administrator has become party in his place, according to Rev. St. § 955 (Comp. St. 1916, § 1592), and Jones has contended that all the proceedings since Leake’s death are void, because the suit has not been so revived, nor carried on by the surviving plaintiff, in pursuance of Rev. St. § 956 (Comp. St. 1916, § 1593)'. But we think it sufficiently [273]*273clear that the contract was with the two plaintiffs as partners, that any interest acquired therein by Leake would have survived to Pettingill, and that the record shows the suit to have proceeded since Leake’s death in Pettingill’s name as surviving plaintiff. In the District Court’s rulings regarding this question, assuming that Pettingill and Leake acquired any interest in the property in dispute by virtue of their contract, we find no error.

The District Court, on March 21, 1914, decreed that Pettingill was “entitled to relief under the bill”; that he had acquired and then owned an undivided half interest, equally with Jones, in so much of Limon as Adelaida had conveyed to Jones, as above, both their interests having been acquired “by purchase from Adelaida Olivieri”; also that he was entitled to redeem from Jones one-half of one-ninth of her father’s interest in Limon, upon payment to Jones of a proper proportion of “the sum found to be due by” Olivieri’s heirs “upon the Alvarado mortgage,” crediting against such sum the net proceeds of the property while held by Jones, less the value of Jones’ improvements. Reference to a master was ordered, to ascertain the amount so to be paid Jones for the purpose of such “redemption.”

The master having reported said amount to be $1,464.75, the District Court, on March 1, 1915, confirmed his report, and further decreed that Pettingill pay Jones said amount, the receipt taken therefor to be lodged in the registry of the court.

From these decrees, both entitled “Final Decree,” after a motion for reconsideration thereof had been denied May 29, 1915, Jones appealed to this court on July 8, 1915.

The principal question raised before us was not raised by the answer to the bill, nor at any time during the proceedings in the District Court, until Jones alleged in his petition for reconsideration, above mentioned, as ground for reconsideration, that the District Court had erred in not holding the contract sued on “contrary to good morals, champertous, and void,” and therefore a contract upon which no recovery could he had. In denying the petition the District Court held, as appears from, its opinion dated May 29, 1915, that Jones could not attack the validity of the contract for the first time after final decree, nor at any time “when not a party to the contract”; and discussion of its validity was regarded as unnecessary. It also held Jones-estopped in any case from raising the question, by acceptance from Pettingill of the amount required for “redemption” of the interest claimed by him, as determined by the master.

[2-4] The above objections to the validity of the contract raise a question of public policy, apparent from the record and involving no disputed questions of fact.

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Bluebook (online)
245 F. 269, 157 C.C.A. 461, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-pettingill-ca1-1917.