Payne v. Clark

220 N.W. 262, 117 Neb. 238, 1928 Neb. LEXIS 39
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 22, 1928
DocketNo. 25681
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 220 N.W. 262 (Payne v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Payne v. Clark, 220 N.W. 262, 117 Neb. 238, 1928 Neb. LEXIS 39 (Neb. 1928).

Opinion

Goss, C. J.

This is an action at law by plaintiff to recover of the defendant on three causes of action for money alleged to have been collected and retained by him while acting as her attorney and for certain damages alleged against him. Defendant filed answer and cross-petition praying for judgment for services rendered in addition to those for which compensation had already been received by him. The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff for one dollar and found against defendant on his cross-petition. From an order overruling her motion for a new trial and entering judgment on the verdict, the plaintiff appealed.

The appellant and appellee sustained the relation of client and attorney for nearly three years prior to July 18, 1922, when that relation ceased. He brought and conducted the suit for divorce against her husband in the district court, where she was unsuccessful, and on appeal in this court, where the cause was reversed by an opinion by the commission, adopted August 8, 1921, directing a judgment for absolute divorce and for alimony in the sum of $25,000, payable in ten equal annual instalments with interest at 6 per cent. In addition thereto, her attorney was allowed a fee of $1,500 in addition to all other allowances, to be taxed as costs. The total allowances for attorney’s fees appear to have been $1,800. After the judgment was entered as directed, the attorney continued to represent the client in matters relating to the collection of her judgment and in the investment of the proceeds of her divorce suit, until July 18 or 19, 1922, when differences arose between them over money matters and he was discharged. In her first cause of action she charged that he had collected and [240]*240received a total of $1,800 as attorney’s fee allowed in both courts, that he had retained $.500 as fees out of a $2,000 collection on her account on August 13, 1921, and $4,665.24 on or about March 22, 1922; that said amounts were obtained by fraud, deceit and bad faith on defendant’s part, and that the total of $6,965.24 constitute an excessive charge for services, by reason of which she prayed for treble damages on the alleged fraudulent items, or a total of $15,948.27, with interest on the first cause. For her second cause of action she alleged that on December 1, 1921, the defendant collected $500, part payment on a $2,000 note ■given as evidence of that sum loaned for her out of a collection of $2,500 on her alimony judgment on August 13, 1921. On that she asked $523.33 with interest. Her third cause of action was based on the charge that the defendant refused her demands made July 19 and 20, 1922, to surrender to her a will drawn for her by him in June or July, 1921, claiming he had delivered it to her soon after its execution. For this she prayed judgment for $25, as the reasonable cost of drafting another will.

The defendant joined issues by answer and cross-petition. He alleged the engagement by her on and.prior to November 21, 1919,'to procure a divorce and alimony from her husband, as well as to recover the possession of certain property she owned; that she represented she had no money to pay costs and attorney’s fees and that she would, upon obtaining funds, amply and generously compensate him for his services and would reimburse him for advances ; that he undertook said work, relying on said promise, and secured the reversal in the supreme court of the judgment of the trial court; that thereafter plaintiff assigned to defendant an amount equal to an interest of 20 per cent, of her recovery in the divorce action and authorized him to collect and enforce the payment; that he brought an equitable action to recover property in Douglas county and secured a settlement on the basis of plaintiff’s claim; that he negotiated agreements with regard to several properties in the interest of the plaintiff, advanced [241]*241upwards of $1,100, which plaintiff has refused to pay. Defendant traverses the various allegations of the petition, sets up items claimed to be due him amounting to $4,074.88, and prays for an accounting and for judgment. The result was as stated at the beginning of this opinion.

The evidence is voluminous and it is a law case. It was submitted to the jury on conflicting evidence. It will suffice to state such of the evidence as appears necessary in a discussion of the errors assigned.

The 124 errors set up in the motion for new trial have been reduced to 22 in the assignment of errors1 in the brief of appellant. The first one relates to the second instruction given to the jury in the following language:

“Under the law and the evidence in this case it appears beyond dispute that the defendant received from- the plaintiff on and before the 24th day of March, 1922, money and property of the value of $5,165.24 as an attorney’s fee in the case of Payne v. Payne, and that he was not entitled to the same because he was fully paid for his services by award of fees made him in the supreme court, and because in any event the contract and assignment upon which he took the said $5,165.24 was void as against public policy unless said fee was given defendant by the plaintiff as an honorarium with full knowledge on her part that she was under no legal obligation to let him have the same and was in full possession of all of the facts in regard to her lawsuit and in regard to what her attorney had done in connection therewith.

“If you find by a preponderance of the evidence that said money and property received by the defendant was such gift or honorarium, and also that plaintiff is not entitled to recover on her second and third causes of action, you should find against the plaintiff upon her petition and proceed at once to the consideration of the cross-petition of the defendant. If on the other hand you find that such money and property received by the defendant was not given him as a mere honorarium or gift, you will find for the plaintiff upon her petition in at least the sum of $5,165.24, with [242]*242interest at the rate of 7 per cent, per annum from the 24th day of March, 1922. But of course she cannot have this recovery and also a recovery of triple damages as prayed.”

Before discussing this instruction, we desire to call attention to subsequent assignments of error relating to five instructions requested by the court, in which the court was asked to instruct in substance: That ah attorney is required to exercise the highest order of good faith and to inform a client of all facts in his possession which might influence the client to enter into or refuse to execute the contract in issue; that assignments or conveyances by client to attorney, while the relationship exists, are regarded with disfavor and are presumed to have been improperly secured; that there is a presumption of unfairness or invalidity attaching to a contract for compensation between attorney and client after the establishment of the relation; that the burden rests with the attorney to show that the contract was fair, just and equitable, and, in the absence of such proof, the transaction should be treated as constructively fraudulent; and, again in varied language, that dealings between an attorney and client are prima facie fraudulent.

To comprehend the relation of the instructions thus refused with the instruction given, it is necessary to realize to some extent what the evidence was in the matter of compensation to be made to the attorney for services. There was no agreed fee in advance and thus the implied contract was for reasonable compensation. The courts had evidently allowed as temporary and final attorney’s fees a total of $1,800.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
220 N.W. 262, 117 Neb. 238, 1928 Neb. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/payne-v-clark-neb-1928.