Pearson v. Evans

1923 OK 795, 219 P. 328, 93 Okla. 28, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 308
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 16, 1923
Docket12006
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1923 OK 795 (Pearson v. Evans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pearson v. Evans, 1923 OK 795, 219 P. 328, 93 Okla. 28, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 308 (Okla. 1923).

Opinion

Opinion by

PINKHAM, C.

This was an action commenced by the defendant in error, as plaintiff, against the plaintiff in error, as defendant. There was a verdict for plaintiff for $383, with interest at 6 per cent, from February 19, 1918, and on July 17, 1920’, judgment was rendered upon said verdict in the sum oí $412.15, with interest from date.

The cause of .action as. stated in the petition filed in the district court, was to the effect that plaintiff on January 8,* 1917,' employed the defendant as an attorney at law, to represent him in a certain action against one T. O. Bivins, and the Cushman Motor Works, for personal injuries which he had sustained in an automobile accident on the 2oth day of September, 1916.

The contract of employment between plaintiff and defendant was in writing and a copy thereof attached to the petition. The correctness of the copy of the said contract is admitted.

This contract of employment provided for a contingent fee, and by its terms plaintiff agreed with the defendant to give him an assignment of a one-third interest in any amount which might be collected by the defendant upon said claim, without suit, but that, in the event that suit became necessary, the plaintiff agreed to transfer, assign, and set over to the defendant,- “an amount equal to one-half of any sum which may be •collected by him after suit has been commenced.”

The plaintiff further alleged in his petition that in the suit filed for damages for these injuries by the defendant, as his attorney, there resulted a verdict and judgment in his favor in the sum of $3,500, such judgment being rendered on the 11th day of September, 1917: and that on the 19th day of February, 1918, while the said action was pending in the district court, and said judgment was unsatisfied, the defendant, with the consent of the plaintiff, negotiated a 'compromise and settlement of said judgment with the attorney for the defendant -in that case for the sum of $2,000, which sum was paid to the defendant, and that the latter, notwithstanding the existing contract in writing heretofore referred to, retained $1,400, and gave to the plaintiff' but $600. The plaintiff admitted that he had also received $17 from •the defendant, and that there was due him from the defendant the remaining sum of $383, with interest.

In the answer of the defendant in addition to a general denial, defendant admitted that he represented the plaintiff in a damage suit, and that the plaintiff recovered judgment in that suit against tbe Oushmán Motor Works for $3,500. '

.For further answer defendant alleged that under and by virtue of a contract the defendant had with the plaintiff when said judgment was rendered, the defendant was to have a half-interest in said' judgment,' and that the plaintiff, over the protest of the defendant, settled his interest in said judgment for $600; that the plaintiff" settled said *29 judgment of his own accord as to Ms interest ; that plaintiff was' present when the matter was settled, and was present when the check for $2,000 was made to him and the defendant;; that said settlement for $600 on the part of the plaintiff was his own indi-ridual settlement and that defendant had nothing to do with the plaintiff settling his part for $600.

A number of assignments of error are urged for reversal of the judgment, and they are presented and discussed in the brief of defendant under three propositions.

In the concluding part of Ms brief, defendant summarizes those propositions substantially as follows; that plaintiff did not offer any testimony to prove the case as set out in his petition, that the court did not instruct the jury on the issues as raised by the pleadings; that the plaintiff did not reply to the answer of the defendant, leaving the burden of proof where the pleadings left it, on the plaintiff; that the court placed the case on the question of fraud by his instructions; and the pleadings leave it entirely with the contract.

In the consideration of these propositions discussed by defendant in his brief, it becomes necessary to briefly review the undisputed facts disclosed in the record, which are substantially as follows:

The plaintiff, a negro laborer, employed the defendant, as attorney at law, to represent him in an action for personal injuries. A written contract of employment was entered into, by the terms of which in the event that suit became necessary, the plaintiff agreed to- transfer and assign to the defendant “an amount equal to one-half of the sum which may be collected after suit has been commenced”. In pursuance of the said contract of employment the defendant instituted an action on behalf of his client which resulted in a verdict and judgment for $3,500. That was not a final judgment, as the record discloses that the attorney for the casualty company that furnished the insurance to the Cushman Motor Works, the defendant in the personal injury case, had the record of that case completed and ready to file for an appeal to the Supreme Court,

In that situation, the plaintiff, the defendant, and the attorney for the casualty company, Mr. Spielman, at the office of the latter entered into a compromise settlement, at which time and place Mr. Spielman had a check or draft for $2,000 made payable to the joint order of the plaintiff and defendant. This check was delivered by Mr. Spiel-man to the-defendant. Mr. Spielman at-the time took a satisfaction piece for the judgment in the case of Evans v. Cushman Motor Work's, which was signed by Andrew Evans and A. E.- Pearson,., attorney for -plaintiff, whereby satisfaction and payment in full of the judgment in. the personal injury case was acknowledged • of record.

The record further discloses tha't thé defendant after securing the indorsement of the plaintiff to the $2,000 check gave to the plaintiff his personal check for $600, and it then being after banking hours, the defendant instructed the plaintiff to return the next day at which time he accompanied the -plaintiff to the Exchange National Bank, where the defendant transacted business, for identification, at which time the plaintiff then drew $600 in currency.

It was the defendant’s theory as shown in his answer to plaintiff’s petition, and is amplified in Ms brief, that he was entitled to one-half of the amount of the judgment of $3,500.' Under the third proposition submitted in his brief, defendant says:

“We think it should not be questioned that the plaintiff in error had an undivided one-half interest in said judgment and having an undivided one-half interest in said judgment he had a right to demand whatever he desired for his one-half interest in the sanie as long as his demand was not greater than one:half of the face of the judgment.”

The error in this proposition is that it ignores both the contract of employment and the statute law of this state.

By the express terms of the contract he was to receive for his legal services “an amount equal to one-half of any sum which may be collected by him after suit is commenced” and not, as alleged in his answer and earnestly argued in his brief, a half interest in the judgment in the personal injury case, regardless of what sum might be collected by a compromise settlement. Section 4101, Compiled Statutes 1921, provides:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1923 OK 795, 219 P. 328, 93 Okla. 28, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pearson-v-evans-okla-1923.