Mainard v. Fowler

1935 OK 79, 42 P.2d 878, 171 Okla. 582, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 52
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 29, 1935
DocketNo. 23745.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1935 OK 79 (Mainard v. Fowler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mainard v. Fowler, 1935 OK 79, 42 P.2d 878, 171 Okla. 582, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 52 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The defendants in error filed suit against the plaintiffs in error and others, to recover judgment for attorneys’ fees. For 'Convenience, the parties will be designated as plaintiffs and defendants as they appeared in the trial court. The plaintiffs filed their action in the superior court of Seminole county against the defendants J. L. Mainard, M. F. Mainard, Jr., J. A. Ligón, E. C. Aldridge, Mabel Garner, O. Brixey, Herman Shapard, J. F. Remy, Mary Casey, and the Farmers National Bank of Wewoka, Okla., a corporation. Before the final submission of the ease to the jury, the same was dismissed as to all of the defendants except J. L. Mainard, M. F. Mainard, Jr., J. A. Ligón, and E. C. Aldridge.

The plaintiffs alleged for their first cause of action in their petition that they were each duly licensed and practicing attorneys, and that as such they were jointly employed by the said defendants to represent them in a suit in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Oklahoma, involving the title of land belonging to the defendants; that pursuant to said employment they did represent said defendants in the Federal District Court, wherein a judgment was rendered in favor of the defendants; that thereafter both complainants appealed to the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit of the United States, and thereafter the Circuit Court of Appeals rendered its decision, affirming the District Court on both appeals; that a petition was filed for rehearing by one of the complainants and later denied; that said complainant then filed in the Supreme Court of the United States his petition for a writ of certiorari, which was denied; that in connection with the handling of said litigation, they spent a great deal of time, and were required to travel approximately 5,800 miles, and were out of their offices approximately 34 days; that the value of the property involved was approximately $100,000; that a reasonable sum for their said services was $10,000.

And in their second cause of action they set out expenses paid by them in said litigation for the benefit of the defendants, in the sum of $158.62.

In the third cause of action they ask to have an attorneys’ lien established against funds derived from said land in litigation *583 then on deposit in the defendant Farmers National Bank of Wewoka, Okla.

They pray for judgment on their first and second causes of action in the amount of $10,158.62, against all of the defendants except the bank.

That thereafter the defendants J. L. Mainard and M. F. Mainard, Jr., filed their motion to make more definite and certain, in which they ask that the plaintiffs be required to state whether or not said employment was an employment of the plaintiffs as individuals, or whether the same was the employment of their respective firms, and pursuant to an order of court, the plaintiffs filed an amendment to the petition, in which they state that they were not partners, and that in all of the litigation mentioned in the original petition they were jointly employed by said plaintiffs to appear and represent said defendants, as their joint attorneys, and that the contract of employment was a joint one and not several, nor in their individual capacity. The defendants Mainard filed their separate answer, which was a general denial, specifically denying that they, or either of them, had at any time employed the plaintiffs jointly to represent them as their attorneys in the litigation; that they were represented in said litigation by their private counsel, and that the defendants, J. A. Ligón, and E. C. Aldridge, were represented by A. M. Fowler, and Biggers, Wilson & Aldridge, the said Aldridge being a son of the defendant E. O. Aldridge, and that the pther defendants likewise jiad their respective counsel, and that, at a conference had between the attorneys for the various parties, during the litigation, an agreement was had among said attorneys that $2,500 would be a reasonable fee to be charged.

At the conclusion of the testimony, the defendants J. L. Mainard and M. F. Mainard, Jr., moved for an instructed verdict in their favor, on the grounds that the testimony showed that, at the time of the purported qmployr^ent of Virgil Biggers, the firm consisted of Biggers, Wilson & Aldridge, and that Bart Aldridge would be entitled to one-third of the fee recovered, and that therefore there was a misjoinder of parties plaintiff, and the plaintiffs were not entitled to recover in this action, which motion was by the court overruled and exceptions saved. Thereafter, the cause was submitted to the jury, who returned the following verdict:

“We, the jury, impaneled and sworn in the above entitled cause, do upon our oaths find for the plaintiffs in the sum of $4,500, to be paid by the following: J. L. Mainard and M. F. Mainard, Jr., $1.500, also E. O. Aldridge, $1,500, also J. A. Ligón, $1,500, this first day of December, 1931. G. O. Gibbons, Foreman.”

No objection to the form of the verdict was made at the time it was returned, and before the jury had been discharged. Thereafter, in conformity with said verdict, the court entered judgment against the defendants J. L. Mainard and M. F. Mainard, Jr., for the sum of $1,500, and against the defendant E. O. Aldridge for the sum of $1,500, and the defendant J. A. Ligón for the sum of $1,500, which said journal entry was O. K.’d by the attorneys for the defendants Mainards.

To reverse this judgment, the defendants J. L. Mainard and M. F. Mainard, Jr., appeal to this court.

The defendants set forth in their brief five assignments of error, which they argue under three propositions, as follows:

(1) Every action must Ibe prosecuted by the real parties in interest. Where the defect does not appear' on the face of the pleadings, and it is shown by the evidence that a third party is interested in the recovery, though not named as a party, it is the duty of the court to dismiss the cause on proper objection.

(2) Where an agreement is reached, the contract is complete, and the parties are bound thereby. Thereafter, neither of the parties shall be permitted to avoid said contract, especially if the same has been complied with by any one of the parties thereto.

(3) The verdict of the jury, and judgment of the court is contrary to the law, and not supported by the evidence.

Since the plaintiffs in error in their brief present but three propositions, under holdings of this court, they will be deemed to have waived and abandoned any other assignments of error contained in their petition in error. Van Noy v. Schnoor, 114 Okla. 46 243 P. 134; Donnelly v. Atkins, 130 Okla. 33, 264 P. 911.

We will take up the propositions in the order above set out. It will be noticed that, under the first proposition, in the defendants’ verbal motion and in their assignment of error, counsel referred to a “misjoinder” of parties plaintiff, which means an excess of parties, and not a “defect” of *584 parties, which means too few (Niblo v. Drainage District, 58 Okla. 639, 160 P. 468), but undoubtedly counsel meant to raise the objection of a defect of parties.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 79, 42 P.2d 878, 171 Okla. 582, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mainard-v-fowler-okla-1935.