Parker v. Fryberger

214 N.W. 276, 171 Minn. 384, 1927 Minn. LEXIS 1605
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJune 3, 1927
DocketNo. 25,754.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 214 N.W. 276 (Parker v. Fryberger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parker v. Fryberger, 214 N.W. 276, 171 Minn. 384, 1927 Minn. LEXIS 1605 (Mich. 1927).

Opinion

Holt, J.

There was a verdict for plaintiffs and a motion in the alternative for judgment non obstante or a new trial. Judgment was ordered and entered, but was reversed on plaintiffs’ appeal therefrom. Parker v. Fryberger, 165 Minn. 374, 206 N. W. 716. This left the motion of defendant undecided so far as concerned a new trial. It was thereafter considered by the court below, and an order entered denying the same. From that order defendant appeals.

That the complaint as amended stated a cause of action, and that the evidence in support of the verdict was such that judgment notwithstanding could not stand, must be considered settled beyond dispute by the former appeal. Questions involved and directly decided in that appeal are now to be considered res adjudicata. Rarely do courts on a second appeal reconsider questions determined in the first. We see no good reason for any re-examination of the questions of fact or law decided in the previous appeal. The basis of that decision was that the contract sued on and which the jury found defendant made with plaintiffs was legal, and that the learned court below erred in holding it illegal as being against public policy. This court in the first appeal also determined that it was not neces *386 sary to submit to the jury whether the contract of employment required plaintiffs to solicit clients for defendant, and that the submission of such a question was not saved by the record for use upon the motion for a new trial. This point was in answer to an argument in the trial court’s memorandum attached to the order granting judgment non obstante. In passing it may be said this (though not necessarily involved on the former appeal) is so clearly true upon the record that nothing further need be said.

While in the former appeal it was directly decided that there was evidence to sustain the verdict so that therefore judgment non obstante could not be rendered, we nevertheless do hold that the propriety of a verdict for plaintiffs and the amount thereof may be raised on defendant’s subsequent appeal from the order denying a new trial; likewise such rulings, in the course of the trial, to which defendant objected and which are properly saved in the record and assigned as errors here.

The first proposition is that the evidence does not justify the verdict or, at any rate, is so deficient in substance that it was an abuse of judicial discretion not to grant a new trial. The action was upon an alleged express contract for services to be rendered and information furnished and to be furnished defendant to aid him in asserting claims as an attorney for persons defrauded as stockholders or as noteholders of the Dan Patch Railway Corporation by the chief executive officers thereof, plaintiffs to receive as their compensation one-third of the fees defendant should obtain therefrom. For a further statement of the issues see Parker v. Fryberger, 165 Minn. 374, 206 N. W. 716. The chief contention now is, and on the trial was, that even though an employment could be found in relation to the stockholders’ suit, plaintiffs were neither employed nor requested to do anything in the noteholders’ suit, and never did render any service or give any information of any benefit in that matter. The court’s instruction was explicit that plaintiffs’ employment and work must include both matters in order to find a verdict in their favor. The question then is, was there any evidence upon which the jury could predicate employment, information, and services relative to the Meeker suit, or the noteholders’ interests? *387 There seems to have been. Plaintiffs testify that defendant was told, at about the first interview when both of them were present, that one Mason, an officer of the Dan Patch Line, could furnish information of great value, and defendant admits that he received such from Mason relative to the noteholders’ suit, but he claims that that was only obtained after Mason had become defendant’s client and more than two years after plaintiffs’ alleged contract was made. This, however, presented questions of fact for the jury. Mason was not a witness.

On this record, it must be said that defendant is not in a very good position to claim that there is no connection between the two suits. At about the time the Meeker suit was begun an amended complaint was served in the Jacobson or stockholders’ suit. And both actions appear to have gone hand in hand to one lump settlement. No written settlement was introduced showing what note-holders or what stockholders participated in the money received. That some of the proceeds went to the latter defendant admits. The jury could find that the information plaintiffs agreed to furnish and did furnish was made use of by defendant in both matters and that the result to him was fees to the amount of $15,000 with interest. To be sure, there were objections to the introduction of any testimony as to the employment and services in respect to the Meeker suit under the amended complaint, but evidently defendant anticipated the scope of the complaint in that respect, for in his answer thereto he alleges that plaintiffs rendered no services in reference to that action.

While it seems improbable that an attorney should make so liberal a contract as this with persons having such limited experience in making investigations and gathering information as plaintiffs had, there are matters in the record which the jury could consider in explanation thereof. Defendant had an established reputation as a champion of minority stockholders in controversies with majority stockholders or corporate officers, also as being very effective with claims based on fraud and deceit. One of plaintiffs had been in the employ of the Dan Patch Line in a prominent position, and presumably had knowledge of the inside management of the corpora *388 tion and therefore might possess information which defendant deemed of great assistance and would bring him in touch with others from whom more could be had. The jury could also consider what took place between the parties hereto subsequent to the settlement of the suits when, according to one of plaintiffs, defendant made two part payments of $250 to him, and later informed plaintiffs that he had finally collected the money and that they could come to his office and get theirs. This was all flatly denied by defendant, but the dispute made the matter for the jury.

It is argued that the contract was too indefinite, its performance too uncertain and, at any rate, that there is a failure to prove that the settlement was the proximate result of plaintiffs’ services. Cases for real estate agents’ commissions, for the recovery of damages for tort, and for damages, general and special, for breach of contracts are cited. We think these are not in point. Plaintiffs’ employment did not stipulate that their services and information should be the sole means to bring about the fees. It was contemplated that defendant’s skill and ability should be the large factor in attaining results. Defendant had the right to direct the efforts of plaintiffs, and could use or not use as he saw fit the information they might gather. We do not think the employment was so indefinite as to be incapable of identification, or the proof of performance so vague that the jury could not determine the matter. Among other cases, defendant cites Masline v. New York N. H. & H. R. Co. 95 Conn. 702, 112 Atl.

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Related

Fryberger v. Parker
28 F.2d 493 (Eighth Circuit, 1928)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
214 N.W. 276, 171 Minn. 384, 1927 Minn. LEXIS 1605, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-fryberger-minn-1927.