Redick v. Woolworth

17 Neb. 260
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1885
StatusPublished

This text of 17 Neb. 260 (Redick v. Woolworth) 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
Redick v. Woolworth, 17 Neb. 260 (Neb. 1885).

Opinion

Cobb, Ch. J.

The plaintiffs, in and by their petition in the court below, alleged that about the year 1874 the defendant, who was then and still is practicing law in the city of Omaha, put into the hands of Charles H. Sedgwick, who at that time and until about the year 1877 was a practicing lawyer in the said city, a certain claim or demand which he, said defendant, had control of, against one Henry Tucker, with the agreement and understanding between said defendant and said Sedgwick that said Tucker should be forced into bankruptcy, and if the said Sedgwick should be made assignee of said estate the said Sedgwick should attend to the business as far as consistent with his said trust, and 'he, said Sedgwick, should receive one equal half of all attorney’s fees charged and received by said defendant, and said defendant was to receive one equal half of all commissions charged and received by said Sedgwick as such assignee when said estate should be finally closed; that in pursuance thereof proceedings were commenced against said Tucker in bankruptcy, and the said Sedgwick was made [261]*261assignee, and a long, tedious, and difficult litigation followed, and said Sedgwick took charge of the same and did the entire labor and business in connection therewith, and in all things said Sedgwick lived up to his said agreement, and all commissions received by him were divided between him and the said defendant, as well also as a retaining fee of five hundred dollars paid said defendant soon after said suit was commenced; that said cause was taken to the supreme court of the United States and there affirmed, which finally settled all litigation touching said estate; that about the month of April, 1878, the plaintiffs, with the knowledge and consent of said defendant, purchased of said Sedgwick his interest in all fees and commissions in said suit thereafter paid or to be paid to said defendant, and paid therefor about the sum of eight hundred dollars, and thereafter, with the consent of said defendant, said plaintiffs were to be subrogated to the rights of said Sedgwick therein; and that about the month of May, 1880, the said defendant received as further attorney’s fees in said action the sum of about eighteen hundred dollars, all of which he retains, and refuses to account for or pay over to the plaintiffs or said Sedgwick said sum of money or any part thereof, though he has been often requested so to do, etc. Wherefore plaintiffs allege that he is justly indebted to them in the sum of one thousand and fifty dollars, etc.

The defendant for answer denied that he ever put into the hands of said Sedgwick any claim or demand against one Tucker with the understanding or agreement between said defendant and said Sedgwick that said Tucker should be forced into bankruptcy, or that said Sedgwick if made assignee of said estate should attend to the business as far as consistent with said trust, and he, said Sedgwick, should receive one equal half of all attorney’s fees charged and received by said defendant, or that said defendant was to receive one equal half of said Sedgwick’s commissions as charged and received by him as such assignee. He further [262]*262denied that in pursuance of any such agreement or understanding proceedings were commenced against said Tucker in bankruptcy, or that said Sedgwick took charge of or did the entire labor or business in connection with a litigation in connection with said bankrupt’s estate, or that in all or any matters connected with the same lived up to any agreement alleged in said petition, or that all commissions received by him were divided between him and defendant. He also denied that said plaintiffs, with defendant’s knowledge or consent, purchased of said Sedgwick his interest in all or any fees or commissions in said suit thereafter paid or to be paid to said defendant, or that said plaintiffs were to be subrogated to the rights of the said Sedgwick therein. Defendant denied that he had received commissions to -the amount of $300 or $400, or that he is indebted to the said plaintiffs in any sum whatever.

For a second and further defense the defendant alleged that at the time the said Sedgwick was made assignee of the said estate of said bankrupt, he, the said Sedgwick, applied to the defendant to sign the bond which as such assignee he was required to give; and that defendant did thereupon sign the bond in such case made and provided, and thereby became security that said Sedgwick should faithfully perform his duties as such assignee and pay overall moneys coming into his hands to the proper' persons and at the proper times; but the said Sedgwick did not properly execute his trust as such assignee, and collected moneys to the amount of $760 which he failed to pay over as his duty required him to do, and finally left the state of Nebraska and abandoned or was removed from his said trust, and thereupon William L. Peabody was appointed assignee in his place and stead; that the United States district court for the district of Nebraska, sitting in bankruptcy, upon due notice to the parties concerned, ascertained the amount of the assets of said bankrupt estate which had come to said Sedgwick’s hands and was by him unaccounted [263]*263for as $760, and made an order on him to pay the same to said Peabody as assignee aforesaid, etc., and that defendant paid to said Peabody the said sum of $760 for said Sedgwick, and the said Sedgwick thereupon become liable to defendant for the repayment of such sum, and was so liable at the time of the pretended assignment to the plaintiffs in this action; but neither the said Sedgwick nor any person for him has paid the said sum or any part thereof. The defendant therefore claimed to set off the said sum of $760, with interest from the time of the payment thereof, against any sum, if any, which might be found due from defendant.

The said answer also contains a third and fourth defense, but which it is'deemed unnecessary to further notice in this connection.

There was a reply on. the part of the plaintiffs denying the several matters of defense set up in the answer.

There was a trial to a jury, a verdict for the defendant by direction of the court, a motion for a new trial overruled, a judgment for the defendant, and the cause brought to this court on error.

It appears from the bill of exceptions that the plaintiffs offered in evidence in their behalf a deposition of Charles H. Sedgwick. When they came to the sixth interrogatory, which was in the following words, “ Int. 6. What was the understanding and arrangement between you and the defendant, if any, with reference to business or claims he might place in your hands?” the defendant objected, or rather renewed an objection to the said interrogatory that had been made at the taking of the deposition, on the ground that the said interrogatory was incompetent, irrelevant, immaterial, and improper, for the reason that it was “an attempt to prove a contract that was void as against-public policy, and void as an attempt to impede the due administration of justice,” which objection was sustained; and the answer of the witness, which was as follows, “I [264]*264was to have one-half of the fees, costs, and commissions in all such cases,” was excluded. When offered, the same objection was made to interrogatories 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, and 18, and was sustained.

It appears also from the bill of exceptions that upon the trial W. J. Connell, one of the plaintiffs, was sworn as a witness on behalf of the plaintiffs.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 Neb. 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/redick-v-woolworth-neb-1885.