Morgan v. Roberts

38 Ill. 65
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 38 Ill. 65 (Morgan v. Roberts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morgan v. Roberts, 38 Ill. 65 (Ill. 1865).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Breese

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The question arising upon this record is mainly as to the proper construction of the contract made by the parties to this suit, and the alleged abandonment of the same.

It appears from the testimony, that Morgan had been a large contractor with the Peoria and Oquawka Railroad Company, out of which, as he claimed, heavy damages had accrued to him, both for estimates on the work he had performed, and on account of the prospective profits he would have made on the work, if he had not been discharged by the Company.

This being the position of Morgan, he, on the eleventh day of October, 1856, entered into a contract with the defendants in error then counselors at law, of the following purport: “Memorandum, of a retainer by R. P. Morgan and P. W. Peck-ham, of Louis M. Andrick, and also of Blackwell, Thomas and Roberts, this eleventh day of October, 1856.

The former, Messrs. Morgan and Peckham, are to pay the said Andrick twenty-five dollars on or before the 15th inst., and one hundred and twenty-five dollars within ten days from this date, and one hundred dollars by the close of the present term of the United States Circuit Court for the Northern District of Illinois. The said Morgan and Peckham are to pay an equal amount, at the same periods, to Blackwell, Thomas and Roberts. The said Andrick, and the said Blackwell, Thomas and Roberts, severally engage themselves to institute and prosecute with diligence, a suit for a claim (in the said court during this term, so if possible to bring it to a judgment) against the Peoria and Oquawka Railroad Company for the estimates made to said R. P. Morgan. If the above respective two hundred and fifty dollars are not paid at the said periods, then an additional two hundred and fifty dollars is to be paid to the said Andrick, and the said Blackwell, Thomas and Roberts, or either of them, as there may be default so made (by) the one or the other law concern, as liquidated and fixed damages. If any further professional services shall be necessary in the said proceeding after judgment, in order to make the amount recovered, the said Morgan and the said Peckham engage to employ the said parties as above, and to pay them an additional two hundred and fifty dollars each, that is to say, five hundred dollars in all of such additional sum. The said Morgan and Peckham also engage to employ the above parties in any subsequent litigation growing out of the said Morgan contract with said Company, and also in any litigation with Iroquois County in regard to the payment of certain coupons held against said County by said Morgan and Peckham, or either of them; provided there can be an agreement between the parties as to the amount of fees and the time of payment of them.”

This agreement is dated October 11, 1856, and signed by the firm of Blackwell, Thomas & Roberts, by Louis M. Andrick, and by E. P. Morgan and Peckham. Peckham became a party to this agreement to employ these gentlemen as counsel, because he had purchased an interest of one-third in the contract.

It seems these counselors advised that two suits should be brought, one for the estimates on the work done by Morgan, and the other for prospective profits which Morgan might have made, if he had not been prevented by the Company from completing the contract. The above contract, it will be seen, has reference alone to the suit upon the estimates.

The suit for the estimates was instituted about the 13th day of October, 1856, and that for prospective profits was commenced on the 19th. of the same month.

Whilst these suits were pending, the one in debt for the estimates, and the other in covenant for prospective profits as arising-out of the contract, in November, 1856, demurrers were filed in each case, and on argument the court held that the causes of action should be joined in one suit, and accordingly, these attorneys obtained leave to commence an action of assumpsit, or rather to convert their actions of debt, and of covenant into an action of assumpsit, on payment of all costs then incurred, and to dismiss the actions of debt and of covenant.

Pending this action of covenant, another contract of retainer was entered into between these parties on .the 21st of October, 1856, as follows: The said Andrick and the said firm are respectively to conduct the suit now instituted in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern District of Illinois, in the name of the said Morgan against the Peoria and Ocjuawka Eailroad Company, for a violation of the construction contract between him and the said P. & O. E. E. Co., being an action of covenant commenced on or about the nineteenth instant. The said suit is to he conducted to its final termination unless the cause of action shall be compromised by the said Morgan, and the said Andrick and the said firm are to be paid by the said Morgan, out of the moneys or property, or both, realized, each, five (5) per cent, of the whole amount of the moneys or property, or both, realized, making in the whole ten (10) per cent, on all the moneys or property, or both moneys and property, in any way realized. This is to be paid whether the cause be compromised, sold, assigned or transferred to any other party or parties, or settled. In the event óf a sale, assignment or transfer of the claim, the said Andrick and the said firm are to be paid the aforesaid per cent, only on the amount of the consideration money or property, or both, over and above the estimates already sued on by saiid Morgan, that is, if the said estimates shall be included in such sale, assignment or transfer; otherwise the said per cent, is to be upon the whole amount as aforesaid.

Before the trial of' the suit, and before the contract of October 21, the Railroad Company paid on Morgan’s order, twenty-five thousand five hundred and fifty-four dollars on his claim.

On the 26th of April, 1857, the cause, then known as an action of assumpsit, was tried, and a verdict found 'for Morgan of forty-seven thousand four hundred and thirty-six dollars. By agreement of the parties a judgment was rendered on this verdict, with the understanding that it should stand as a security, the court at the same time awarding a new trial. In the following October another trial was had, and a verdict found for Morgan for fifty thousand dollars, which the court also set aside. On the final trial in September, 1858, there was a verdict and judgment for Morgan for fifty thousand dollars.

An execution issued upon this judgment, which was returned not satisfied. About March, 1857, Morgan and Peckham, the plaintiffs in error, made an assignment of their claim to one Dennis Beach, he having notice of the equitable rights of defendants in error, if any they have. One Robinson also claimed to be an assignee of Morgan on the 4th of February, 1860, subject to all other just claims.

In December, 1858, Morgan, Peckham and Beach, filed their bill in. the McLean Circuit Court, against the Railroad Company and others, to obtain satisfaction of the judgment, and the court, by its decree of September 11,1860, established the rights of the complainants, and appointed William W. Orme as receiver, and directed him to pay over certain receipts raising out of the operation of the Railroad, to Beach and Beckham, to satisfy the money due on the judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
38 Ill. 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-v-roberts-ill-1865.