Pierce v. Norton

74 A. 686, 82 Conn. 441, 1909 Conn. LEXIS 73
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedDecember 17, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 74 A. 686 (Pierce v. Norton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pierce v. Norton, 74 A. 686, 82 Conn. 441, 1909 Conn. LEXIS 73 (Colo. 1909).

Opinion

Hall, J.

The plaintiff, an attorney at law of this State, brings this action to recover for professional services rendered the defendants between the dates of February 11th and October 6th, 1908. The total of the charges in the bill of particulars is $4,079.34, while the credits amount to $1,300. The circumstances which the plaintiff claimed to have proved, as indicating the character of his services, were these:—

Prior to 1899 the defendant Lucius B. Norton had conducted a collection agency in Hartford, under the name of the National Mercantile Company. In 1899 he caused it to be incorporated under that name in Connecticut, with an authorized capital stock of $5,000, and in 1900 to be incorporated under the same name in Maine, with a capital *443 stock of $250,000. The business of the collection agency was carried on until 1904 without anything to indicate to the public which of said corporations was conducting it.

In 1904 Norton caused the Maine corporation to issue all its capital stock to him as paid up stock, the only consideration therefor being the transfer to the Maine company of the business of the Connecticut company, and caused the Maine company to vote to pay him an annual salary of $10,000 for acting as president, treasurer and general manager of the company.

Between 1904 and 1908 Norton sold shares of the stock of the Maine company to various persons to the amount of $60,000. In February, 1908, Norton was also manager of the International, Petroleum and Refining Company, a Maine corporation, owning mining properties in Indiana, and was the owner of $900,000, par value, of the $1,000,000 of stock of said company, and was also the manager of the Mechanics Mutual Fire Insurance Company of Connecticut, for which Norton had obtained a special charter in this State. Norton had an office in Hartford, and the books of said several corporations were kept there.

On February 10th and 11th, 1908, actions were instituted in Maine and in this State, by a stockholder of said Maine company, in which receivers were appointed of the National Mercantile Company, who commenced an action against these defendants claiming $200,000 damages, and who later commenced an action in Maine against said International Petroleum and Refining Company and these defendants, claiming $500,000 damages; and in March, 1908, a criminal action was instituted against said Norton in the Hartford Police Court, charging him with having embezzled the funds of said National Mercantile Company of Maine, and of persons doing business with the National Mercantile Company, upon which Norton was bound over for trial in the Superior Court.

The plaintiff acted as counsel for these defendants while- *444 these actions were pending, and appeared for them, both in the courts of this State and of Maine, and in June, 1908, with the approval of the Nortons, an agreement of settlement of all claims against the Nortons was arranged by the plaintiff and other counsel for the Nortons, and counsel for the receivers, to take effect upon its approval by the courts in which said receivership proceedings were pending, by the terms of which agreement the Nortons were to cancel their stock in the National Mercantile Company, and to pay to the receivers $15,000. After said courts had approved said agreement of settlement, the defendants, on the 12th of’October, 1908, upon the plaintiff’s refusal to aid them to repudiate said agreement of settlement, discharged him and procured other counsel. The defendants afterward paid the receivers the $15,000 in settlement of all the claims against them, and said criminal proceedings were thereafter nolled.

The plaintiff claimed to have proved that it was agreed between himself and the defendants that he was to be paid from $3,500 to $4,000 for his services.

The defendants in their answer admit having employed the plaintiff, but deny that the services rendered were worth more than the $1,300 paid by them.

The finding states that the defendants claimed to have proved that they had been guilty of no crime, and were not indebted to the National Mercantile Company; that Lucius B. Norton had frequently so told the plaintiff; and that the plaintiff, from corrupt motives or from timidity and incompetency, urged said settlement upon the defendants and frightened them into signing it.

The defendants’ appeal contains seventy-eight assignments of error based either upon the failure of the couH to charge as requested, or to the charge as given, or to the rulings upon questions of evidence. Most of them are so clearly unfounded as to require no discussion. The •following is a part of the charge complained of: — ■

*445 “And right here, gentlemen, I ought to say to you, as there has been some criticism as to Mr. Pierce’s revelations, as to what took place between him and his client, Mr. Norton, on some occasions, and .these criticisms have been as if there was something of a discreditable nature in his repeating such matters here in court in response to the claims and statements of Mr. Norton on the witness stand, let me say to you . . . that the seal of secrecy as between attorney and client is broken when, in a suit for services by an attorney against his client, his client enters upon a line of defense which involves what in fact took place between him and his attorney and respecting which the client testifies as in this case, the client waives any right to object to the attorney giving his account of the matter and the criticisms of counsel as to Mr. Pierce revealing professional secrets has no justification in law.”

The line of defense adopted in this action, and attempted to be supported by the testimony of Norton, was that the plaintiff, either corruptly or from incompetency, had induced the defendants to pay 815,000 to the receiver in settlement of the suits against them, when he knew or had good reason to know that the defendants had neither committed the offenses nor were indebted to the National Mercantile Company, as charged in the civil and criminal actions against them.

An attorney may maintain an action against his client for professional services, and when to such action a defense like that in the present case is made, he may show the circumstances under which the services were rendered, in proof of their value and in proof of his good faith. The finding states that the defendants offered evidence to prove that Lucius B. Norton had not been guilty of any crime or wrong doing; that neither of the defendants owed the National Mercantile Company; and that Lucius B. Norton had so repeatedly told the plaintiff. The record shows that such was the testimony of Lucius B. Norton.

*446 Clearly the plaintiff was entitled to meet this evidence by proving either that Lucius B. Norton did' not so inform him, or that Norton told him the contrary, or that the plaintiff, from his investigations of Norton’s transactions, had good reason to believe that such statement, if made by Norton, was untrue, and that the plaintiff acted in good faith and with good judgment with reference to the settlement, made. There was no error in the language of the charge above quoted. Hunt v. Blackburn,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 A. 686, 82 Conn. 441, 1909 Conn. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pierce-v-norton-conn-1909.