MacKall v. Willoughby

167 U.S. 681, 17 S. Ct. 954, 42 L. Ed. 323, 1897 U.S. LEXIS 2125
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 24, 1897
Docket274, 281
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 167 U.S. 681 (MacKall v. Willoughby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MacKall v. Willoughby, 167 U.S. 681, 17 S. Ct. 954, 42 L. Ed. 323, 1897 U.S. LEXIS 2125 (1897).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shiras,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

The vital question depends for its answer on the interpretation to be given to the contract between the parties. It is in the following words and figures:

“ This agreement made this 10th day of April, 1883, between Brooke Mackall, Jr., .and Westel Willoughby, witnésseth :
“That whereas the said W. Willoughby has been for a considerable period acting as counsel in the case of Albert Richards and others v. Brooke. Mackall and others, No. 2373, in equity, in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, and which is now pending before the Supreme Court of the United States, for the defendants in said suit, and whereas he is counsel for the-plaintiff in the case of Brooke Mackall, Jr., v. Alfred Richards and others, in equity, No. 8118 in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, and he is also counsel for the defendant in the case of Leonard Mackall and others v. Brooke Mackall, Jr., No. 8038, in equity in said court:
*684 “Now, therefore, in consideration of the services of said W.Willoughby as such counsel, performed and to be performed, he hereby agreeing to conduct the said above-mentioned suit of Richards and others, No. 2373, to a final termination and adjudication by the court of last resort to the best of.his ability as such counsel, the said Brooke Mackall, Jr., hereby agrees to allow and pay to him as compensation for such services, in addition to what has already been received by him a sum equal to fifty per cent of such money as may be adjudged to the said B. Mackall, Jr., as aforesaid, and which may be recovered in said suit of Brooke Mackall, Jr. v. Richards and others, in equity, No. 8118, by way of mesne profits, damages and costs, provided, that if such fifty per cent be léss than $5000, the said W. Willoughby shall have such sum of $5000, and the said W. Willoughby shall have a lien therefor upon said judgment and property as may be recovered, against the said Alfred Richards; and the above compensation shall be received by the said W. Willoughby in full satisfaction for his services in the aforesaid matters in' controversy as counsel, he to have no other compensation for such services.
“ It is provided further, that if said causes Nos. 8038 and 8118, are not finally determined in the court sitting in special term, and an appeal is taken, for such services as may be necessary in appellate courts an additional compensation shall be allowed, which shall hereafter be agreed upon by the parties, and he shall also be allowed an additional compensation for services in No. 2373, which may be necessary after the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States upon the points now pending therein.”

The construction put upon this agreement by the complainant is that he was entitled, on performing the services which he thereby agreed to render, to have a fee of not less than five thousand dollars, and to have the same declared a lien upon all the property that may have been recovered in the three cases named in said agreement as Nos. 2373, 8118 and 8038 on the docket of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, in which he had acted as cpunsel for the defendant, Brooke Mackall. .

*685 The theory of the defendant is that the compensation, in addition to what he had already received, was exclusively contingent upon recovery in cause No. 8118; that it was to be a sum equal to fifty per cent of such recovery; and that the lien contemplated was to be upon the property recovered in that cause, and upon that property only. And he no'w contends that, as there was no recovery in No. 8118, the complainant was entitled to nothing, and .his bill should have been dismissed.

The litigation mentioned and contemplated in the agreement was over lot 7, in square 223, in the city of Washington. On.a portion of the lot was erected a building known as the Palace Market. One Richards, who had furnished material for its construction, filed a mechanic’s lien thereon and on the lot on which it stood. In proceedings to enforce payment of this lien, a sale was had by the marshal, at which sale Richards became the purchaser. The marshal’s deed to Richards described the property sold as follows: “ Beginning at the northeast corner of said square, and running thence south forty-four feet; thence westerly to the west end of the lot; thence in a northerly direction with the west line thereof to the north line of said lot; then with said northerly line tq the place of beginning.”

Cause No. 2373 was a bill filed by creditors of Mackall, including Richards, seeking to subject tp sale for . the satisfaction of their judgments all of the lot No. 7 not before sold by the marshal of the District to Richards, and asserting that Mackall had such an interest therein as rendered it liable to the satisfaction of such judgments. On May 1, 1873, the court adjudged and decreed as follows: “ That the title to said réal estate in the proceedings in the said cause mentioned — that is to say, to all of lot numbered seven, in square numbered two hundred and twenty-three, in the city of Washington, not heretofore sold by the marshal of the District of Columbia to the complainant Alfred Richards — is vested in the defendant Brooke Mackall, Jr.,” and appointed trustees to sell the same. Upon exceptions to the sale and report thereof by the trustees, the court sustained the exceptions on the ground of the imperfect *686 description of the property to be sold, and subsequently directed another sale of “ all that portion of lot seven in square 223, in the city of Washington, lying south of a line drawn from "a point on the line of Fourteenth street, northwest, westwardly and parallel with New York avenue, to the west line of the said lot seven. This order is made without passing upon the validity of the said marshal’s sale.”

These exceptions were .filed on behalf of Mackall- by Willoughby. From the decree of the general term affirming this decree of sale ¿n appeal was taken to this court, where it was held that the part sold to Richards in the mechanic’s lien proceedings was only the part of the lot upon which the Palace Market stood; 112 U. S. 369.

Upon this decision Mackall paid the judgment creditors, and there was no sale of any part of the lot to satisfy them. The result, therefore, of case No. 2373 was that Richards’ title, derived from his purchase under the mechanic’s lien proceedings, was restricted to the Palace Market and that portion of the lot on which it stood; and that Mackall’s title-was affirmed to the rest of the lot.

In- the meantime, on April 11, 1882, cause No. 8118 had been instituted. It was a suit in equity, the object of which was to recover possession of that part of lot seven which had been sold to Richards by the marshal in 1870, and also to recover the mesne profits while Richards had been in possession. The court below in special term dismissed the bill; but that decree was reversed in general term, the sale and conveyance by the marshal to Richards being set aside as void and of no effect.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
167 U.S. 681, 17 S. Ct. 954, 42 L. Ed. 323, 1897 U.S. LEXIS 2125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mackall-v-willoughby-scotus-1897.