Norman v. Bennett

246 N.W. 378, 216 Iowa 181
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 17, 1933
DocketNo. 41476.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 246 N.W. 378 (Norman v. Bennett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Norman v. Bennett, 246 N.W. 378, 216 Iowa 181 (iowa 1933).

Opinion

Kindig, C. J.

This was a special proceeding commenced by D. L. Norman, the plaintiff-appellant, under section 11608 of the 1927 Code, to recover from W. T. Bennett, the defendant-appellee, $600 in cash which the latter, as attorney, collected for the former, as a client, from the clerk of the Marshalltown municipal court.

Such $600 in cash previously had been placed with the clerk as a bond in a criminal case to secure the liberty of the appellant. Two criminal cases were pending at the time against the appellant. The one involved a charge of driving an automobile at a rate of speed prohibited by a Marshalltown ordinance, and the other had to do with the offense of illegally transporting intoxicating liquors, contrary to the state statute. A cash bond of $30 was posted in the speeding charge, and another cash-bond of $600 was given in the liquor case. In both cases, the appellant was represented by the appellee, an attorney at law, residing in Marshalltown.

These two cases were disposed of in the following manner: First, the appellee pleaded guilty for the appellant in the speeding case, and used the $30 cash bond therein posted to pay the fine and costs accordingly imposed upon the appellant; and, second, the appellee, at the same time, obtained the dismissal of the intoxi *183 eating liquor charge without the payment of a fine or costs. After the municipal court dismissed the intoxicating liquor charge in the manner and way aforesaid, the appellee collected for appellant, from the clerk of that court, the $600 in cash previously posted as a bond in the intoxicating liquor case. Following such collection of the proceeds of the $600 cash bond, the appellee retained the money as a fee, according to the terms of a written contract. It appears that in an alleged written contract purporting to be dated September 26, 1927, the appellant agreed to give the appellee, for his attorney fees, any and all portions of the $600 bond money not required to pay fines or costs in the criminal proceedings.

Denying the right of the appellee, however, to retain the money under the contract, the appellant commenced said special proceeding on June 14, 1930, to require the former to account for, and turn over to the latter, the $600. thus collected from the clerk, as before explained. The municipal court denied the relief, and the appellant appeals.

On the appeal it is claimed by the appellant that the contract for attorney fees was obtained by fraud and misrepresentations, that' the alleged contract is champertous and void, and that the contract is against public policy because it was a gambling contract and provided that the amount of the fees was to depend upon the attorney’s influence with the court.

These propositions will now be considered in the following order:

I. As previously indicated, the appellant claims that the written contract above named was procured through thé appellee’s fraud. Such fraud arose, the appellant contends: First, because when the contract was obtained the appellee pretended that the prosecutions of the foregoing cases were pending, when, as a matter of fact, they had been dismissed; and, second, because the appellee pretended that the charges against the appellant were serious, when in fact, under the circumstances they were not.

According to the appellant, the contract was signed on Wednesday, September 28, 1927. A judgment of dismissal was entered in the intoxicating liquor case on the preceding Tuesday. Likewise, on that Tuesday a fine of $25 had been imposed in the speeding case and costs assessed in the sum of approximately $5.00. Both cases, then, the appellant contends, were disposed of on Wednesday when he signed the written contract at appellee’s request.

*184 Contrary to the appellant’s contention, the appellee maintains, that the written contract for the attorney fees was signed not on Wednesday but on the preceding Monday. The contract upon its face bears the date of Monday. Consequently there is a conflict in the evidence upon this question. Witnesses were produced by each party and testimony taken on this subject. Moreover, experts testified at the trial that, although the appellee received $30 as a retainer at the inception of his employment, yet the additional sum of $600 received by him under the written contract was a fair and reasonable fee for the legal services performed. This fee would be fair and reasonable, the experts declared, regardless and independent of the written contract. The appellee obtained a bond for the appellant and secured a dismissal of the intoxicating liquor charge with the understanding that a plea of guilty was to be entered in the speeding case. Evidence was introduced by the appellee also indicating the seriousness of the prosecution of the criminal charges against the appellant. While it is true that the appellant submitted evidence indicating the contrary, yet this again presented a jury question.

Under the entire record, the municipal court found for the appellee on the questions involved. There being a conflict, then, in the evidence on the questions under consideration, this court, in this special proceeding, is bound by the finding of the municipal court. Union Building & Savings Association v. Soderquist, 115 Iowa 695, 87 N. W. 433; Phoenix Co. v. Sinclair, 169 Iowa 564, 151 N. W. 462.

II. Furthermore, it is argued by the appellant that, regardless of the foregoing conclusion, the judgment of the municipal court should be reversed because the above-mentioned written contract is champertous and void. Whether the contract in the case at bar comes within the definition of champerty, we do not now decide. Under the record, it is not necessary to determine this question. The appellant did not raise this proposition in the municipal court. As before stated, the appellant in the municipal court sought to set aside the written contract for attorney fees on the theory of fraud. By way of answer, the appellee justified his retention of the $600 under and by virtue of the written contract. At no time, according to the abstract, did the appellant set forth champerty as a defense.

On appeal in cases arising under a special proceeding *185 of the kind in question, the controversy is determined on errors assigned. Union Building & Savings Association v. Soderquist (115 Iowa 695, 87 N. W. 433), supra; Phoenix Co. v. Sinclair (169 Iowa 564, 151 N. W. 462), supra.

This court, on appeal, will not consider a question not raised in the trial court. Carlson v. City of Marshalltown, 212 Iowa 373 (local citation 383), 236 N. W. 421; New Amsterdam Casualty Co. v. Bookhart, 212 Iowa 994 (local citation 1001), 235 N. W. 74, 76 A. L. R. 897; Duncan v. Rhomberg, 212 Iowa 389 (local citation 402), 236 N. W. 638. Generally, section 11209 of the 1931 Code requires the appellant to plead champerty when relying upon it as a defense (Disbrow v. Supervisors of Cass County, 119 Iowa 538, local citation 541, 93 N. W. 585; Allison v. Chicago & Northwestern Ry. Co., 42 Iowa 274, local citation 280), but in the summary proceedings here involved, section 11612 of the 1931 Code provides that the cause shall be determined “without written pleadings”.

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

Related

In Re Disbarment of Decaro
262 N.W. 132 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1935)
Phinney v. Montgomery
257 N.W. 208 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1934)
In Re Disbarment of Cloud
250 N.W. 160 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1933)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
246 N.W. 378, 216 Iowa 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norman-v-bennett-iowa-1933.