Lyon v. Oliver

147 N.E. 251, 316 Ill. 292
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 1925
DocketNo. 15387. Appellate Court reversed; circuit court affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 147 N.E. 251 (Lyon v. Oliver) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lyon v. Oliver, 147 N.E. 251, 316 Ill. 292 (Ill. 1925).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Heard

delivered the opinion of the court:

April 2, 1919, Clara F. Strawn, administratrix of the estate of Christopher C. Strawn, deceased, and Louis F. Strawn, surviving partner of the firm of C. C. & L. F. Strawn, filed their bill in chancery in the circuit court of Livingston county, Illinois, praying for certain relief which is not now pertinent to the case and for the enforcement of an attorney’s statutory lien for $10,000 for legal services rendered in the case of Oliver v. Ross, which is reported in 289 Ill. 624. Defendants in error, Revilo Oliver and Flora Oliver, filed their answer to the bill, in which they admitted the performance of legal services and alleged that $1000 would be a reasonable and usual fee therefor and that the same had been paid. February 7, 1920, an amended and supplemental bill was filed by the complainants. To this bill the Olivers filed separate answers. In his answer Revilo Oliver denied that he had employed Louis F. Strawn as his attorney but admitted that he had employed Christopher C. Strawn, and admitted “that for said services the said Christopher C. Strawn, he owes to him, the said Christopher C. Strawn, or his surviving heirs, a reasonable attorney’s fee for the services performed,” and in another paragraph of the answer admitted “that he owes to said Christopher C. Strawn, or his legal heirs and administrator, a fair and reasonable attorney’s fee for the services performed, and he denies that the sum of $10,000 is a reasonable and usual and customary attorney’s fee charged and paid for such services at the bar of Livingston county, Illinois.” Flora Oliver by her answer also denied that the sum of $10,000 was a reasonable fee for the services. On July 30, 1921, Revilo .Oliver filed an amended answer, in which for the first time he averred that the employment of C. C. Strawn was on the 15th day of December, 1908, and that he agreed to accept employment on the following terms: He was to receive $2000 for his services and in addition $20 per day while engaged in taking evidence and $10 a day and expenses for services rendered outside of the county. The cause was referred to the master in chancery, who took and reported the evidence. Thereafter Clara F. Strawn, as administratrix, was dismissed as complainant and a supplemental bill was filed. August 12, 1921, a decree was entered in accordance with the prayer of the bill, giving the complainant a lien for the sum of $10,000. August 13, 1921, Louis F. Strawn died, and his death having been suggested to the court, J. M. Lyon, the duly appointed administrator of the estate of Louis F. Strawn, surviving partner of the firm of C. C. & L. F. Strawn, was substituted as complainant herein. An appeal from this decree was taken by defendants in error to the Appellate Court for the Second District, where the decree of the circuit court was reversed and the cause remanded to the circuit court, with directions to enter a decree finding that there was a valid contract between C. C. & L. F. Strawn and Revilo Oliver in the terms of exhibit D, hereinafter set forth, and that appellee in that court is entitled to recover thereunder $2000, $20 a day for the time spent before the master in taking testimony, and $10 a day and expenses when Strawn was required to be outside of the county in this business. The record is now before this court upon certiorari.

The only question involved herein is whether C. C. & L. F. Strawn were to receive for their services the usual, reasonable and customary sum paid for services of like character, or whether there was an agreement between them and Revilo Oliver whereby they were to receive for their services the sum of $2000 for the time devoted to the preparation of the case, $20 a day for taking testimony before the master, and $10 a day and expenses for services rendered out of the county.

The basis of the contention of the defendants in error that there was an expressed agreement is the alleged receipt by Revilo Oliver in December, 1908, of a letter from C. C. Strawn, which was introduced in evidence as exhibit D. Exhibit D consists of two typewritten sheets upon the note-head of C. C. & L. F. Strawn, the first sheet of which is as follows:

"Mr. Revilo Oliver, Iowa Park, Texas: ^
“Dear Sir — Our next term of circuit court sets January 12, 1908, and your case must be in by Saturday the 2d or you can not get in before May. If I am to begin any case for you I must have at least a week’s time to prepare the papers. Then you must have service on the defendants by January 2d, ten days before the first day of the term, beginning on the 12th, as above stated. This I cannot do until I receive my retainer and sufficient money to pay the clerk’s advance fees and the sheriff’s advance fees for the services of the summons on the defendant. I write so that you may know — ”

The second sheet below the note-head of C. C. & L. F. Strawn is as follows:

“what you are doing and what you have to do to get into this term of court. You should send my retainer of $100 at once so I can begin the suit.
“As to my fees, I will charge you $2000 for the time I devote in the preparation of the case and $20 a day for taking testimony before the master and $10 a day and expenses for services rendered out of the county. I think this a reasonable fee considering the amount involved. “Vnnr= +r„Tv „ _ _
„ _ _ Yours truly, c. c Strawn.”

This letter was alleged by the Olivers to have been received by them in an envelope which was introduced in evidence as exhibit C. Original exhibits C and D have been certified to this court.

It is contended by plaintiff in error that exhibit D is a forgery; that the first sheet of this exhibit is written upon a blank note-head which Oliver had obtained in some manner, and that the second sheet was originally a letter or some other document under the signature of C. C. Strawn, and that the written and typewritten matter which now appears thereon had been written after an erasure of the former matter. It is also contended that exhibit D was not sent by Strawn to Oliver at the time at which it purports to have been sent. The legal services rendered extended over a period of over four years, and the correspondence between Strawn and Oliver, in which many letters were written by each, extended over a much longer time. While the services were being rendered the Olivers lived in C. C. Strawn’s home for about four years, during which time they had access to the whole house, and during which time letter-heads of the firm of C. C. & L. F. Strawn were always in the dining room of the house, which was used as the main living room, and were used as ordinary writing pads. C. C. Strawn used the dining table as his desk for writing and reading at night. He and the Olivers had many lengthy discussions there with reference to the case, during which many papers were examined and discussed and memoranda made with reference to the same. Under these circumstances it would not be strange if the Olivers should find among their papers an unused note-head of the Strawn firm, or if they should find among them on the note-head of the Strawn firm some partly written and partly typewritten paid note or other document bearing the genuine signature of C. C. Strawn.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
147 N.E. 251, 316 Ill. 292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lyon-v-oliver-ill-1925.