Montgomery v. Anglo-California Trust Co.

68 P.2d 1057, 157 Or. 187, 1937 Ore. LEXIS 93
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 11, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 68 P.2d 1057 (Montgomery v. Anglo-California Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Montgomery v. Anglo-California Trust Co., 68 P.2d 1057, 157 Or. 187, 1937 Ore. LEXIS 93 (Or. 1937).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, J.

On April 24,1935, plaintiff filed his amended complaint in the circuit court for Multnomah county, alleging, in effect, that plaintiff is an attorney at law practicing that profession in the states of Oregon and California; that at the special instance and *189 request of defendant Robert Dollar Company, a California corporation, and Anglo-California Trust Company, a California corporation, plaintiff rendered professional services as an attorney in a certain foreclosure suit entitled Anglo-California Trust Company, trustee, v. Dollar Portland Lumber Company, in tbe United States Court for the District of Oregon; that such services were of the reasonable value of $25,000 which defendants had promised to pay; that demand for payment had been made and the defendants have paid no part of said sum; and prayed for judgment. •

To this complaint, the Anglo-California Trust Company filed its answer in which it admitted the services performed by plaintiff in connection with the above mentioned foreclosure suit, but denied that the connection or existence of such services arose in the manner described in plaintiff’s complaint.

For a further and separate answer and defense, defendant Anglo-California Trust Company alleged, in substance, that it was named trustee in a certain indenture of mortgage to secure the payment of bonds of the Dollar Portland Lumber Company, and that the interest on said bonds was in default during the year 1929; that during that year, the defendant Robert Dollar Company formulated and presented to defendant Anglo-California Trust Company a plan for the deposit of said bonds and a plan for the reorganization of the Dollar Portland Lumber Company; that in pursuance to said deposit agreement, the Robert Dollar Company would have to bear all the expenses of said foreclosure suit, and the defendant Robert Dollar Company requested the trustee to be allowed to furnish the services of the general counsel of the Robert Dollar Company and that it had or would secure the deposit of all of said bonds and that it rep *190 resented all the bondholders; that the plaintiff was well acquainted with all of these matters in connection with the said foreclosure proceeding and that plaintiff throughout the entire proceeding' knew that his relationship with the defendant Anglo-California Trust Company was purely nominal and not factual and that he was acting wholly and in truth as general counsel of the Eobert Dollar Company.

It further alleged that the cause of action set forth in plaintiff’s complaint arose in the state of California prior to December 31, 1929, and not having been commenced within two years from that date it was barred by the statute of limitations of the state of California, § 339 C. C. P. of California [which they pleaded in haec verba]. Said section provides that actions of this nature must be brought within two years of their accrual.

Defendant Eobert Dollar Company filed its answer in which it admitted the performance by plaintiff of the services in the foreclosure suit above mentioned, but denied that such services arose in the manner described in the complaint.

For a further and separate answer and defense, this defendant alleged':

‘ ‘ That in the month of March 1927, a contract was entered into between the plaintiff and this defendant whereby the plaintiff for a stipulated monthly salary agreed to act as general counsel for this defendant and to devote his entire time to the exclusion of any other business to the performance of any and all legal services arising in connection with the activities, business and properties of defendant corporation and any affiliated or subsidiary corporation or corporations or any firm or corporation in which the principal officers and stockholders of this defendant were interested, and to perform such services as might be required at *191 Ms hands in. connection with the individual business interests of the executives of this defendant corporation; that the contractual relationship thus created continued throughout the period covered in the amended complaint herein, and that at all of said times the defendant paid to the plaintiff the said salary.”

It was further alleged that the Dollar Portland Lumber Company was a corporation in which the executives of the Robert Dollar Company and the Robert Dollar Company were financially interested and was one of the corporations which was included within the scope of plaintiff’s employment; that this defendant was a large stockholder, general creditor, and a holder of mortgage bonds of Dollar Portland Lumber Company, secured by a mortgage held by defendant Anglo-California Trust Company, as trustee, under the indenture of mortgage to secure payment of said bonds and that this defendant requested the Anglo-California Trust Company to permit plaintiff, as general counsel for this defendant, to handle the legal services attendant upon the foreclosure of said mortgage; that the Anglo-California Trust Company with full knowledge of plaintiff herein, acquiesced in said request and permitted plaintiff to institute said foreclosure proceedings. That the defendant Robert Dollar Company acting upon the request of plaintiff herein, employed other counsel to assist plaintiff in said foreclosure suit and defendant paid all other counsel so employed; that shortly prior to the sale in said foreclosure suit, this defendant was appraised of the fact that plaintiff had included in the items going to make up the prospective bid, the sum of $25,000 as an attorney’s fee to be allowed defendant Anglo-California Trust Company, plaintiff therein. That plaintiff explained to defendant that it was *192 proper to include such an item in such proceedings and that it would not create any liability on either of defendants and that plaintiff would file with the clerk of the court a receipt in full for such amount, whiqh he subsequently did.

In paragraph VI of the further and separate answer, this defendant pleaded facts which it claims show laches on part of plaintiff as follows:

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Related

Bennett v. CITY OF SALEM
235 P.2d 772 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1951)
Wood v. Honeyman
169 P.2d 131 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1945)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 P.2d 1057, 157 Or. 187, 1937 Ore. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montgomery-v-anglo-california-trust-co-or-1937.