Meacham v. Ballard Co. Inc.
This text of 240 N.W. 540 (Meacham v. Ballard Co. Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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The agreed fee to be paid by plaintiff to cover the services of all her attorneys was $10,000. That money is in the hands of Mr. Grimes. It was found below that Mr. Enkema was entitled to one-third of it, with interest, less $666.66 "being one-third of the value of the services" of Mr. Clark R. Fletcher, another attorney who for a time had been associated as counsel for plaintiff. *Page 609
Plaintiff sued as a stockholder in defendant Ballard Company, Inc. Her purpose was to rescind the purchase of stock in that company and recover what she had paid for it. Originally she employed Enkema alone. He first retained to assist him the law firm of Allen Fletcher, of which Mr. Clark R. Fletcher is a member. What they did is now immaterial, but by letter under date of December 3, 1926, Messrs. Allen Fletcher assured Mr. Enkema that he would "receive one-half" of any fee received by them from plaintiff. Not much progress seems to have been made for plaintiff before December 6, 1927. On that day plaintiff wrote a letter to Enkema and Allen Fletcher in terms revoking their agency for her and demanding the return of her papers. On the same day, there is evidence, denied by Mr. Grimes, that the latter prepared, in letter form, an agreement whereby plaintiff employed him, Grimes, to "take" her suit against defendants and agreed to pay him as his fee one-third of the amount collected. Both the letter and agreement of December 6, according to the evidence for Enkema, were the result of prearrangement between him and Grimes that Grimes should come in and take active charge of the case, but that Enkema was not to be actually discharged but should remain as associate counsel and be entitled to one-third of the total fee when and if collected. Mr. Grimes denies any such agreement, but the findings are against him. That Mr. Enkema first secured plaintiff's retainer is not denied. He claims to have done much valuable work on plaintiff's case both before and after the retainer of Mr. Grimes.
1. Citing Brown v. City of New York, 9 Hun, 587; Weinstein v. Seidmann,
2. These attorneys have voluntarily litigated fact issues before a court competent to decide them and must abide the result. If Mr. Enkema's contention be sustained, and it was below, he and Mr. Grimes, from December 6, 1927, on were engaged in a joint adventure. Langdon v. Kennedy, Holland, DeLacy McLaughlin,
3. The other points made for appellants require no separate discussion. Inter alia they question the order bringing in Mr. Fletcher and his firm and valuing his services at $2,000. In that connection it is complained that there is undisputed evidence that there was a contract between Messrs. Fletcher and Grimes whereby Fletcher was to "receive one-third of the stipulated attorneys' fees." It was but good sense to order in as parties Mr. Fletcher and his *Page 611 partners in order that there might be an end of the matter. That Mr. Fletcher was entitled to share in the $10,000 fee no one denies. If as between Grimes on the one hand and Allen Fletcher on the other the latter firm was entitled to one-third of the fee, Mr. Enkema was not party to the contract that produced that result. It did not lessen his right under his agreement with Mr. Grimes, established by the decision below, to his share of the compensation.
Judgment affirmed.
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240 N.W. 540, 184 Minn. 607, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meacham-v-ballard-co-inc-minn-1931.