Pratt v. Kerns

123 Ill. App. 86, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 728
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedAugust 1, 1905
DocketGen. No. 4,532
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 123 Ill. App. 86 (Pratt v. Kerns) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pratt v. Kerns, 123 Ill. App. 86, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 728 (Ill. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Me. Pbesiding Justice Vichees

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Circuit Court of Stark County in favor of Kerns & Fling and against Peter E. Pratt for $50t) for attorney’s fees. Peter Pratt, Sr., the grandfather of appellant, devised eighty-six acres of land in Stark County to his son, Isaiah Pratt, for his natural life with the remainder to his children- if any survived him. In 1896 the life tenant failed to pay the taxes and the land was sold to Harry A. Hammond for the unpaid taxes of 1895. Isaiah Pratt made an effort to redeem, but was apparently unable to do so. Finally he made a contract with A. GK Hammond, the father of Harry A Hammond, by which A. Gr. Hammond was to take a deed for the land and pay his son the amount of taxes, penalties and costs, and when Isaiah or Peter Pratt, Jr., repaid him the amount it cost to redeem the land and for the necessary improvement and taxes thereafter paid, Hammond ivas to reconvey the land to either Isaiah or Peter Pratt, Jr., according to the provisions of the will. The rents were used to pay Isaiah’s board. Appellant attained his majority in September, 1903. The land had not been redeemed up to this time. The evidence shows that appellees called appellant’s attention to the matter of the title to this land and invited him to their office to talk the matter over.

On June 25, 1904, Mr. Colgan, an insurance agent, called appellant up to his office and told him he was in danger of losing his land and suggested that they go to the office of appellees. They went to the office and the contract sued on in this case was made.

The contract, after reciting that appellant’s lands had been sold for taxes, and the desire of Peter Pratt to redeem the same and recover the title to himself, provided that appellees should be employed and authorized, as the attorneys of the said Peter Pratt, to take the necessary legal steps to recover said land for the said Peter Pratt, for which appellant was to pay appellees $500 for such legal services as soon as said lands were redeemed from said tax sales; appellant agreed to pay all costs connected with the redemption. In case said lands were not recovered no fee was to be paid. The evidence shows that about the time the contract was executed Kerns called on A. G. Hammond and told him they were thinking of trying to get Peter Pratt’s land back for him, and inquired of Hammond concerning the status of the title. Hammond then made a full statement of the situation to Kerns, telling him that after this land was sold for taxes Hammond, at the request of Isaiah Pratt, had redeemed the land and had taken the title to hold as collateral security for the payment of the redemption money and for improvements. Hammond told Kerns he had agreed in writing to reconvey as soon as he received his money, and that he was ready and willing to do so. He also informed Kerns that he thought it would require about $350 or $100 to re-imburse him. The date of this conversation is not shown. Mr. Hammond had been the executor of the will of Peter Pratt, Sr., and at the time of this interview gave Mr. Kerns a copy of the will, which he took away with him. Mr. Hammond, a day or two later, drove out to see appellant, and told him he was under a contract to reconvev, and all he wanted was his money. Mr. Poster, an uncle of appellant, assisted him in raising the money to pay off the claim of Mr. Hammond, which was done, and Hammond made a deed in accordance with his agreement, thus clearing up the title. Appellees contend that they did quite an amount of investigating, and prepared the “necessary papers” to recover the land before they were notified that the matter was all settled and that there was nothing further for them to do. Under this statement of facts a judgment for $500 for legal services has been rendered against appellant, from which this appeal is prosecuted.

For the purpose of a decision of the questions involved in this appeal the pleading must be considered as though only a plea of the general issue was filed. Other pleas were filed, but they are either defective in form or not supported by the evidence.

The case was tried below on the theory that if appellees were ready, willing and able to go on and perform the contract, and were prevented from so doing by appellant’s making a settlement with Ilammond, then appellees were entitled to recover the full amount contracted to be paid. Appellees have made an extended argument to sustain this contention, but as applied to contracts between attorney and client the rule seems to be that where a contract is made for a contingent fee and the client settles the case out of the court the attorney is entitled to recover only what the services actually rendered were reasonably worth. 3 Am. &. Eng. Ency. of Law, page 427 (2nd ed.); Western Union Tel. Co. v. Semmes, 73 Md. 9; Polsley v. Anderson, 7 West Va. 202; Ellwood v. Wilson, 21 Iowa 523.

In the Iowa case above cited, Dillon, J., said: “The contract was not intended to prevent the client from settling his cause. The law encourages the amicable adjust-merit of disputes, and a construction of a contract that would operate to prevent.the client from settling will not be favored.”

In Moore v. Robinson, 92 Ill. 491, an attorney contracted to defend and procure the discharge at the June term of a prisoner charged with passing counterfeit money, for $1,000, S600 of which was paid in cash and the balance by a promissory note, and agreed in case he failed to procure such acquittal and discharge at the said June term to return the $600 cash and the note for $400. The prisoner fled the country and did not appear at the said June term. In a suit against the attorney for the money and note it was held that the attorney was entitled to retain compensation out of the $600 for the services actually and in good faith performed before ascertaining that the performance had become impossible, and that a judgment for the balance should go against the attornejL Under the principle laid down in the foregoing authorities an attorney may recover the value of the services actually rendered before performance was prevented or became impossible, and if the proof warranted it, the whole amount might be recovered, but only by proof that the services rendered were reasonably worth the contract price. The evidence as to the extent and value of the services rendered in the case at bar shows that all that was done was to examine the statutes as to the right of redemption, prepare some papers and interview Mr. Hammond. One of the appellees testified that he thinks he spent as much as five days investigating and reading the session laws concerning the right to redeem lands sold for taxes. The other member of the firm admits that he did nothing after the contract was made. While no one testifies as to the value of these services we feel entirely safe in saying that they bear no just proportion to the amount of recovery.

There is still another reason which, to our minds, is fatal to the right of recovery on this contract. After reading all that appellees have to say in support of this contract we are forced to the conclusion that this contract is unfair and that appellees have not acted with that degree of good faith and candor that should always be applied by attorneys' in their dealings with clients.

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Bluebook (online)
123 Ill. App. 86, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 728, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pratt-v-kerns-illappct-1905.