Newman v. Keffer

18 F. Cas. 98, 1 Brunn. Coll. Cas. 502

This text of 18 F. Cas. 98 (Newman v. Keffer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newman v. Keffer, 18 F. Cas. 98, 1 Brunn. Coll. Cas. 502 (circtedpa 1836).

Opinion

BALDWIN, Circuit Justice

(charging jury). The plaintiff sues to recover rent in arrear, alleged to be due to him in virtue of the covenants contained in the deeds, by which the defendants hold, or have held, certain lots in the town of Lancaster, and adjacent out-lots. It is admitted that the title under which he claims the rents is good, and that he has a right to receive what is due; it is also admitted by all the defendants, except the representatives of Mr. Hopkins, that they are liable for such arrears as have become due •on the lots occupied by them, respectively, leaving no subject of controversy except the amount actually due. Mr. Keffer claims a credit for the rent due on one of the lots held by them, because the plaintiff had dis-trained his goods therefor previously to bringing this suit In our opinion, this is no ground for allowing such credit The law •gives the plaintiff cumulative remedies for the recovery of his rent, a distress, an action of covenant, a right of re-entry, and an action of ejectment, each of which he may pursue till he obtains satisfaction. In these respects, the remedies of a landlord are on the same footing as in the case of a mortgage •and bond, the maker and indorser of a note, or several promises or obligations for the same debt; where all parties liable are sued, and all remedies against them are pursued, the pendency of one does not suspend the proceedings on or against another. If costs have been vexatiously incurred, the law acts in relation to them as the justice of each case may require; but they cannot deprive a •plaintiff of his right to recover in an action properly brought, whatever is justly due on -the contract sued on, though there may be another proceeding depending, in which he claims the same thing. We therefore instruct you as matter of law' that this credit cannot be allowed. It is objected on behalf •of Mr. Hopkins’ administrators, that they are liable only for the rent which became due during his lifetime, because the covenants in the deed by which he held the lots is not an express one, the obligation of which does not devolve on his personal representatives. We think this objection will not avail them, and instruct you that by the legal operation of the deeds Mr. Hopkins was personally bound and his administrators now liable. As these questions affect but a small amount of the sum claimed, we have not examined them as thoroughly as we otherwise should have done; they will be considered open to future argument should the counsel desire it. If we should be in error, it can be corrected by entering a remittitur for the amount of the rent due by Mr. Keffer, which has been distrained for, and what has accrued on Mr. Hopkins’ lots since his death. As to the off-set claimed on behalf of Mr. Hopkins, for his professional services to the plaintiff, or the Hamilton estate, the law is now well settled, though it was once questioned; he is entitled by law to recover sucn ■compensation for bis services as they were worth, though no agreement may have been had on the subject You will ascertain from the evidence what services Mr. Hopkins had rendered, as well as what would be a fair and reasonable compensation; it seems that he received one hundred dollars, which Mr. Reigart thinks an ample sum for any services which may have been rendered in the cases referred to in the account presented by the administrators. On this subject you will do what you think is justice, and credit such sum as you may think Mr. Hopkins was entitled to for services actually performed, without deducting anything therefrom on account of his afterwards declining his professional connection with the Hamilton estate. A professional gentleman has also a right to claim a proper compensation, on being retained-'or required not to act or advise professionally, adversely to the person so retaining him, or he may be retained to act generally in all cases and matters in which the other is interested. From the letter of Mr. Hopkins to General Cadwalader, the retaining was of the latter description, and a positive engagement as the counsel of the Hamilton estate; and if you are satisfied that Mr. Hopkins declined acting as counsel of the estates, for no other reason than that stated by Mr. Reigart, and in consequence thereof that other counsel have been employed, no credit ought to be allowed on account of such engagement beyond what will compensate Mr. Hopkins for his actual services. This is a question of fact, which is submitted to you, to decide what services were performed, wlint is a reasonable compensation, and whether it has been received.

[100]*100Before we bring to your attention the interesting grounds of controversy between the parties, we will notice some matters wbicb have been the subject of remark in the course of the argument. Complaint has been made that the plaintiffs have resorted to this court for a remedy, instead of the courts of the state, but the right so to do has not and cannot lie questioned. The reasons why ho has done so are no part of the merits of the causes on trial, or a proper subject of your or our inquiry; for whether plaintiff's reasons for suing here are good or bad. is for him and his counsel alone to judge. It is well known that by the laws of this state a plaintiff must sue and have his cause tried in the county where the defendant is found; the venue or place of tidal can be changed only by a special act of assembly. In this case the plaintiff may have been unwilling to try his causes before a local jury sitting in Lancaster, where there may be some excitement prevailing, on account of the general interest which is felt in the questions at issue between the parties. Suffice it to say, that the constitution of the United States and the judiciary act give to the citizens of other states the option of suing in this or a state court, on causes of action exceeding in amount five hundred dollars; the reasons for constituting a tribunal of a national character to decide controversies between citizens of different states, and our own citizens and foreigners, have ever been deemed wise and just, and impose on juries and courts the duty of so exercising our respective functions, as not to disappoint the just expectations of the plaintiff, or give to the defendant any just cause to regret that he has been brought within our jurisdiction. We must administer the jurisprudence of the state in this court, as it bears on the rights of the parties, and decide between them precisely as the courts of the state ought; in these causes no question arises on the constitution, laws, or treaties of the United States. We are. therefore, bound by the thirty-fourth section of the judiciary act [1 Stat. 02] to make the laws of the state the rule of our decision, so far as they apply, and to take the settled decisions of the supreme court of the state, on the construction of state laws, as a part of the laws themselves. Our decision ought to be the same, which in our opinion the learned and much respected judge who presides in the court at Lancaster would make on the ' causes now before us, without turning to cases referred to by counsel, not connected or having any bearing on the merits of those now on trial. Reference has been made to some part of the opinion of Judge Hayes, in Franciscus v. Reigart [4 Watts, 98], in relation to the facts in evidence in that cause, but though we cannot doubt the entire correctness of the judge’s review of that evidence, it cannot be noticed as tending to prove any fact which has the least bearing in these cases. Adjudged cases in books of reports are referred to for the questions of law which have been decided, but are not to be taken as any evidence to the jury of the facts therein stated;

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 F. Cas. 98, 1 Brunn. Coll. Cas. 502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newman-v-keffer-circtedpa-1836.