Page v. Trutch

18 F. Cas. 995, 22 Int. Rev. Rec. 281, 8 Chi. Leg. News 385, 3 Cent. Law J. 559, 1876 U.S. App. LEXIS 1791
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon
DecidedJuly 31, 1876
StatusPublished

This text of 18 F. Cas. 995 (Page v. Trutch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Page v. Trutch, 18 F. Cas. 995, 22 Int. Rev. Rec. 281, 8 Chi. Leg. News 385, 3 Cent. Law J. 559, 1876 U.S. App. LEXIS 1791 (circtdor 1876).

Opinion

DEADY, District Judge.

This action is brought to recover the sum of $1,800 gold coin, with interest from April 20, 1876, for professional services rendered by the plaintiff to the defendant between November, 1874, and said date, in conducting a suit to foreclose a mortgage upon the north half of block S in the city of Portland. The answer of the defendant admits the services, but [996]*996denies that they are worth more than $300 in coin, and alleges that 'the plaintiff, in the conduct of said suit, received sundry sums of money from the defendant for which he has failed to account; and also that the loan for which said mortgage was given as security was made upon the certificate of the plaintiff acting as attorney for defendant to the effect that the property was “a good and valid security” for such loan, hut that in fact there was a grave question as to the validity of said mortgage, and that the same was ‘‘a perilous and doubtful one,” whereby the defendant was put to great costs, trouble and delay in collecting his money, and suffered great loss on account of the uncertainty of the title to said property, and the consequent depreciation in its market value. The reply admits the receipt of $86.-50 in currency for the plaintiff on defendant’s account, but denies that plaintiff was employed by defendant to examine the validity of the mortgage, and that the security was doubtful or perilous. In pursuance of the stipulation of the parties, the cause was heard by the court on July 21st, without the intervention of a jury.

From the evidence the facts of the case appear to be as follows: In December. 1873, Mr. Edwin Russell, then manager of the Bank of British Columbia, in this city, and the agent of the defendant, then and now a resident of Victoria, V. I., loaned to D. D. Bunnell, guardian of the five minor children of Emsley It. Scott, deceased, the sum of ■ $12,000. in gold coin, at 1 per centum per month interest, and took as security therefor a mortgage executed by said Bunnell, as guardian aforesaid, upon the north half of block 8 in the city of Portland, the same being the property of said minor children. That said Bunnell, before executing said mortgage procured the order of the county court of Multnomah county, authorizing him, as guardian aforesaid, so to do; that said Russell, before making said loan and accepting said security, employed the plaintiff to examine the title to said property and the authority of said Bunnell to execute said mortgage, and that said plaintiff, in pursuance of said employment, gave said Russell a certificate to the effect that the title to said property was in said minor children, and said Bunnell was duly authorized to make the loan and execute the mortgage as security therefor; and that said money was borrowed for the purpose of improving said property by building a market house thereon, which was done. That afterwards, in November, 1874, the interest being in arrears upon said mortgage, the plaintiff was employed by said Russell, acting as the agent of the defendant, to foreclose the same; that in pursuance of said employment he brought suit in the circuit court for the county aforesaid, where there was a decree dismissing the same upon the ground that the mortgage was invalid for want of power in the county court to license the guardian to mortgage his wards’ property; that thereupon said plaintiff took an appeal to the supreme court of the state, which court upon consideration of the cause, gave a decree foreclosing said mortgage and directing a sale of the premises for the amount due thereon; and that afterwards in the spring of 1S7C, the plaintiff caused said property to be offered at sale upon an execution to satisfy said decree, at which sale there being no bidders, the defendant by his agent, Mr. Lloyd Brooke, ’Bid in the same at $13,500, that being substantially the amount then due thereon. That the defendant has only received in satisfaction of the decree in said suit of Trutch v. Bunnell,i the property aforesaid, and that assuming the title to be good, it is not now and was not at the time of said sale worth more than $12,000 in gold coin. That it was worth to foreclose said mortgage, provided there had been no material objection to the validity of the same, not more than 5 per centum of the amount recovered, but there being good cause to question the validity of the same for the alleged want of power in the county court to authorize the guardian to execute the same, and the suit to foreclose being contested by the guardian ad litem on that ground, it was worth not more than $1,000. That the plaintiff, while acting as attorney for the defendant in said fore-elosuz-e suit, received from the clerk of said circuit court, out of the moneys paid to said clerk by the defendant as costs and expenses of said suit, the sum of 3100 in currency, for which he has not accounted to the defendant.

On the argument, several questions of law and fact were discussed by counsel. The plaintiff insisted that in making the examination of the title of the mortgaged premises he was not acting as the attorney for the defendant, but for Bunnell. But upon the-evidence it is clear that the facts and law are to the contrary. In his own testimony, the plaintiff, while he states that Russell was not to pay him for the examination and that Bunnell was. also admits that Russell would not make the loan except upon his certificate that the title was good and that the county court had power to authorize the loan, and that he gave him such a certificate;while Mr. Russell testifies explicitly that lie-employed the plaintiff, who was then attorney for the bank, to make the examination, and that upon his certificate he made-the loan, but that it was understood that Bunnell was to pay all the expenses of the examination of the title, as it was the custom for the borrower to do. Add to this the-frequent declarations of the plaintiff to the agent of the defendant, when doubts were expressed as to the success of the foreclosure suit, that he was responsible for the-validity of the mortgage and would pay the defendant himself if he failed to make it out of the mortgaged premises, and there-[997]*997can be no doubt but that he was acting as the attorney of the defendant in making the examination of the title, and is responsible to him accordingly. The fact that the borrower, Bunnell, was to pay the expense of the examination does not affect the question a particle. If the plaintiff agreed to look to him for the compensation for his services, that did not make him any the less the defendant’s attorney.

Practically, it is admitted that the compensation claimed by the plaintiff is an extraordinary fee, and his right to recover it is placed upon the ground of the serious character of the litigation involved in the foreclosure suit and the extra time, labor and risk incurred by him in conducting it. In . reply to this it is argued for the defendant that as the loan was made by him on the plaintiff’s certificate that the security was .good, and he being responsible for that opinion, if any serious question arose in the course of the litigation concerning the validity of the mortgage, just so far the correctness of the certificate was impugned or brought into question, and whatever extra labor, time or risk the plaintiff incurred on this account, was in fact incurred for himself, and therefore the defendant ought not to be required to compensate him for it.

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Bluebook (online)
18 F. Cas. 995, 22 Int. Rev. Rec. 281, 8 Chi. Leg. News 385, 3 Cent. Law J. 559, 1876 U.S. App. LEXIS 1791, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/page-v-trutch-circtdor-1876.