Merrick v. Giddings

12 D.C. 394
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 18, 1882
DocketNo. 19,066
StatusPublished

This text of 12 D.C. 394 (Merrick v. Giddings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Merrick v. Giddings, 12 D.C. 394 (D.C. 1882).

Opinion

Mr. Justice James

delivered the opinion of the court.

The declaration in this case alleges, substantially, the plaintiffs were retained by the State to aid by legal proceedings, mainly before the Supreme Court United States, in the recovery of certain bonds, proceeds thereof, in the possession of certain persons out right, and belonging to said State, upon a contii^^H compensation of twenty per centum of the amount of^^H of the said bonds or proceeds as might, by means of ’ aid, be in any way recovered by said State; that plaintiffs were acting under that retainer and conducti^H those proceedings, the defendant, with plaintiff‘s\consei^B was retained by said State as her other and further attorn^H and counsel, but upon a separate and' additional compen^B

[396]*396tion to be paid him, to aid in the recovery and collection of said bonds or proceeds ; that afterwards, and while plaintiffs and 'defendant were respectively so employed, the defendant, with the consent of said State, and in consideration that plaintiffs would, by means of their legal proceedings, cause the title of saicLState to said bonds to be therein adjudged and decreed ; bra/would, with the consent of the State, refrain from any attempt to reduce them into possession, and suffer the defendanjjwith like consent, to reduce them into possession for said StateTagreed with plaintiffs that he would retain for their sole nse, and pay over to them, out of any of the said bonds or proceeds thereafter collected or recovered by him, as such other attorney, into his actual possession; twenty per centum thereof; that plaintiffs, with the consent of the State, and by means of their proceedings before the Supine Court, did procure the title of the State to be adjudged as required, and did refrain as agreed, and did, with like consent, permit defendant alone, as such other attorney, to reduce said bonds into actual possession for the State ; and defendant did, by means of the adjudication procured by plaintiffs, and by force of such refraining and possession of the plaintiffs, recover into his actual posses-session for the said State, proceeds of said bonds to the amount of $339,240.12, but did not retain for the use of, or ■^y o /er to the plaintiffs twenty per centum, or any part of BBjtmroceeds, to the damage of plaintiffs in the sum of To this are added the common counts for money by defendant to plaintiffs, and money received by ^^^Hant for the use of plaintiffs.

^Hnr the sake of more intelligible brevity, it may be re-Hu that the cause of action set forth in the special is a breach of defendant’s promise to retain and pay ■Mirto plaintiffs, out of moneys which should be, and which ■Bally were collected by him, the fee -which the State of Has had agreed to pay them ; the consideration for this |H¡>mise being the performance of certain services by them, HHt their forbearance to perform themselves, and their suf-H^g defendant to perform certain other services.

[397]*397Four bills of exception were signed at the trial, but all of them are, in proper form, made part of the last one, and the hearing in this court has been upon the latter only. It shows that “ after the evidence had been given as set forth in the foregoing bills of exception, * * * the plaintiffs announced that they rested their case. Thereupon the defendant prayed the court to instruct the jury that upon the whole evidence their verdict should be for the defendant.” The bill further sets forth certain reasons on which the court based its conclusions, and then adds : “And the court, therefore, gave to the jury the instruction prayed, and the jury, under instruction, returned a verdict ?br'the defendant.”

It is not stated in terms that the bills of exception contain the “ whole ” of the evidence admitted at the trial; but a statement that the plaintiffs rested their case “ after the evidence had been given as set forth in the foregoing bills ” may be accepted as equivalent, besides, a presumption that other evidence was given by the plaintiffs would be a presumption against the decision of the court ; in other words, that error had been committed ; and this is not admissible. The bills of exception describe the evidence, of course, only as “ tending to show ;” but the instruction to ‘the jury answers the same purpose as a demurrer to evidence, and should be tested by the same rule. “A demurrer to evidence admits not only the facts stated therein, but also every conclusion which a jury might fairly and reasonably infer therefrom.” Parks v. Ross, 11 How., 362, (373); Richardson v. The City of Boston, 19 How., 263, (268). In accordance with this rule we. have to state the facts established at the trial.

At the beginning of the late war the State of Texas was the holder of certain bonds which had been issued to it by the United States under the act of Congress approved September 9, 1850, (9 Stat., 446.) During the war these securities were transferred by a certain military board to certain persons, for the purpose of enabling the State to carry on hostilities against the United States, and some of them were delivered to a firm known as White & Chiles, and [398]*398still remained within the United States; the residue had been delivered to one Swisher, and were by him sent to England, -where they were held, partly, by the house of Droege & Co., and partly by the Manchester Bank. The Supreme Court of the United States, by its decree in a certain litigation, established the invalidity of the transfer by the military board to White & Chiles of the bonds held in the United States. Thereupon Chiles set up title to all the bonds then held abroad, under a distinct contract made, as he alleged, between the military board and himself alone,, and served notice of his pretension upon Droege & Co. and the Manchester Bank. Neither of these parties claimed any title to or interest- in the bonds held by them, and the adverse claim of Chiles “ constituted the single obstacle- and impediment ” to their recognition of the right of the State of Texas to reclaim the securities. Meantime, after the decree of the Supreme Court against White & Chiles, and in the year 1873, Mr. Davis, then governor of Texas,, employed the plaintiffs to prosecute, in the United States. Court of Claims, a suit against the United States, in the name of the State of Texas, for the recovery of proceeds of the bonds which had been tranferred to England, upon a contingent compensation of 20 per centum of what might be recovered to the State by means of that suit. What was done with that suit beyond bringing it is not shown. Afterwards, on June 2,1874, a written contract was made between Kichard Coke, as Governor of Texas, and J. D. Giddings, and the defendant in the following words :

“The State oe Texas, Executive Oeeioe,
“ AustiN, June 2,1874.
“These presents show that J. D. and D. C. Giddings have been appointed agents for the State of Texas to pursue, by suit, all persons having claims adverse to the State of Texas to all or any part of the United States five per cent, bonds known as Texas Indemnity Bonds, which passed out of' the possessson of Texas, by means of the operation of the military board; the said J. D. and D. C. Gid-[399]*399dings being also authorized to compromise with said adverse claimants upon such terms as may be approved by the-Governor of Texas. It is further shown that said J. D. and D. C.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Parks v. Ross
52 U.S. 362 (Supreme Court, 1851)
Richardson v. City of Boston
60 U.S. 263 (Supreme Court, 1857)
Davis v. Calloway
30 Ind. 112 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1868)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 D.C. 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merrick-v-giddings-dc-1882.