Lane v. Brown

312 S.W.2d 735, 1958 Tex. App. LEXIS 1971
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 11, 1958
Docket15384
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 312 S.W.2d 735 (Lane v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lane v. Brown, 312 S.W.2d 735, 1958 Tex. App. LEXIS 1971 (Tex. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

CRAMER, Justice.

This is an action for attorney’s fees by appellants Alvin H. Lane and Wm. V. Counts, duly licensed attorneys at law of the Dallas Bar, against F. Lutcher Brown, growing out of alleged employment by Brown to represent him and his sister and brother-in-law in a sale of his interest in ICrafco Container Corporation, a Delaware corporation hereafter called Krafco, alleging Brown’s ownership of one-third *736 of the stock, his brother-in-law’s ownership of one-third and Brown’s sister’s ownership of one-third of such stock. That appellant Brown was duly authorized to and did employ Lane and Counts as Attorneys. Appellant attorneys sought to recover the reasonable value of their services in representing him in the negotiating and carrying out and concluding of the sale of Brown’s stock in such corporation; also alleged an express contract of employment, an implied contract, and, in any event, ratification, approval and acceptance of their services for which they were entitled to recover on quantum mer-uit.

Brown denied making the contract of employment with Lane and Counts and alleged he did not ratify their employment, but claimed the benefit which he received as a result of their services was attributable to their employment in the sale by the corporation and another stockholder and was only incidental to such other employment.

The trial court after hearing the evidence made findings of fact in substance as follows: (1) Lane and Counts are residents of Dallas County and Brown is a resident of Uruguay; (2) Lane and Counts are licensed attorneys; (3) Alvin Lane represented Krafco from about April 19S1 until the sale of the outstanding stock of Krafco to Olin Mathieson Chemical Corporation which was completed in September 19SS; (4) the stock of Krafco was owned one-third by Brown, George Scrimshaw and Joan Scrimshaw. Previously Scrimshaw and Brown had been partners in an enterprise known as Krafco Enterprises, Ltd. Lane represented the partnership from April 1951 until July 31, 1952, when it was dissolved because of disagreements between the parties; (5) Krafco was one of the group of corporations called the West Monroe Corporations, the largest of which was Brown Paper Mill Company hereafter called Paper Mill. Paper Mill produced a paper which was in turn made into boxes and other containers by so-called converter corporations of which Krafco was one; (6) Brown was the largest stockholder of the Paper Mill and father of F. Lutcher Brown and Joan Scrimshaw; (7) the stock of all West Monroe Companies was sold to Olin Mathieson Company for $90,000,000, $3,-000,000 of which was for the stock of Krafco Container Corporation; (8) on June 15, 1955, Lane went to New York in connection with the proposed sale to the Chemical Corporation of the several companies composing the West Monroe Corporations. Lane was instructed to go to New York by Scrimshaw, President of Krafco, and upon his arrival he was employed by Scrimshaw to handle Krafco’s part of the sale; (9) Brown did not at times material to this suit request Lane and Counts to represent him. (10) During the time Lane was in New York from June 15 to July 2, he participated in the preparation of the agreement for the sale to Olin Mathieson. The final draft was completed June 29, 1955 and on or about that date the agreement was executed by Chemical Corporation, Buyer, and Scrimshaw, one of the selling stockholders; (11) during all the negotiations in connection with the preparation of the agreement Brown was in Uruguay and did not know that any one was purporting to represent him in connection with the sale; (12) the final draft of the proposed agreement was taken by H. L. Brown to Uruguay for F. Lutcher Brown and was signed by Brown in Uruguay on July 12, 1955. He had previously received earlier drafts of the agreement. (13) Lane did not communicate with F. Lutcher Brown until he returned to Dallas from New York. Flis first connection was a letter dated July 8, 1955 and received by Brown between July 14 and 18, several days after the agreement had been signed by him; on August 2, 1955, F. Lutcher Brown through his secretary answered Lane’s letter of July 8, 1955, informing him as to the matters to which Lane had referred in said letter “are now being handled by Messrs. Cohen *737 & Beckenstein”; (14) on July 12, 1955, Lane was in Washington in connection with a tax ruling which was to he secured pursuant to the agreement of sale. On that date Lane was in the company of attorney Cohen who at that time phoned defendant F. Lutcher Brown in Uruguay concerning the tax ruling. Lane did not talk with Brown at this time. After this conversation Cohen advised Lane that F. Lutcher Brown did not desire any tax ruling. Lane did not talk with F. Lutcher Brown at this time. There is nothing in the record to indicate that Brown was ever aware that Lane was present. (15) The first communication from Lane to Brown relative to the matter of employment and compensation was a letter of August 23, 1955. A postscript to this letter indicates the attorneys expected to keep separate the work done for the corporation. (16) The amount of the fee was not discussed until about September 9, 1955, just before the sale was closed in New York. At that time Lane set a fee of $50,000 of which he allocated $20,000 to the corporation and $10,000 to each stockholder in Krafco. Scrimshaw agreed both to the allocation and the fee but did not communicate with either of the other stockholders at that time and Mr. and Mrs. Scrimshaw were divorced. (17) At the time of closing there was an open telephone circuit between New York and Montevideo, Uruguay, so that documents could be executed simultaneously. Attorney Lane, though present, did not talk to F. Lutcher Brown. Instructions to Brown with reference to legal clarification were given over the phone by Benckenstein and there is nothing in the record that would indicate Brown was aware that Lane was present at the closing. (18) A statement for services purportedly rendered was mailed Brown by Lane September 16, 1955; (19) Brown did not pay and suit was filed December 28, 1955; (20) following Lane’s return to Dallas July 2, 1955, the major part of his time and that of Counts was devoted to accomplishing matters required by the preliminary and principal agreements; (21) a reasonable fee for services rendered by Lane and Counts is $50,000. There is no evidence as to the value of the legal services rendered to each stockholder. (22) A reasonable fee for the attorneys representing Lane and Counts is $1,500; (23) there is no evidence to establish that George W. Scrimshaw had actual authority to retain Alvin Lane to represent F. Lutcher Brown in the sale of his stock of the corporation. (24) No evidence to establish that the prior conduct of Brown would have led Alvin Lane reasonably to conclude that George Scrimshaw had actual authority to employ Lane to represent Brown in the sale of his stock in the corporation. (25) Scrimshaw had no apparent authority to retain Lane to represent Brown in the sale of his stock in the corporation. (26) There is no evidence to establish that H. L. Brown had actual authority to retain Lane to represent F. Lutcher Brown in the sale of his stock of the corporation. H. L. Brown did not know Lane was contending that he represented F. Lutcher Brown. (27) There is no evidence to establish that the prior conduct of Brown would have led Lane reasonably to conclude that H. L. Brown had authority to employ Lane to represent F. Lutcher Brown in the sale of his stock; and (28) H. L. Brown did not have apparent authority to retain Lane as counsel to represent F.

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Bluebook (online)
312 S.W.2d 735, 1958 Tex. App. LEXIS 1971, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lane-v-brown-texapp-1958.