Sjobeck v. Leach

6 N.W.2d 819, 213 Minn. 360, 1942 Minn. LEXIS 530
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 11, 1942
DocketNo. 33,224.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 6 N.W.2d 819 (Sjobeck v. Leach) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sjobeck v. Leach, 6 N.W.2d 819, 213 Minn. 360, 1942 Minn. LEXIS 530 (Mich. 1942).

Opinions

*361 Streissguth, Justice.

Plaintiff sued defendants, copartners in the practice of law, for their alleged negligence in failing to procure his discharge in bankruptcy. He recovered a verdict of $992.32, representing the principal amount of a default judgment recovered against him by a creditor upon a claim which had been filed in the bankruptcy proceeding and which would have been released by his discharge in bankruptcy. The jury denied recovery upon a second cause of action for expenses incurred in the defense of an action upon the claim.

In 1935 plaintiff bought a retail clothing business in Parkers Prairie on credit for $2,000, the purchase money notes being executed by him and his father, Henry H. Sjobeck. A few months later he married, and his wife lent him an additional $420 for business purposes. Within a year both mercantile and marital ventures failed. In April 1936 plaintiff sold his business for $1,000, but before the sale was fully consummated his wife brought suit for divorce and alimony and served upon him a court order restraining the sale. The proceeds of the sale were thereupon deposited in a bank to abide the outcome of the divorce action a,nd of negotiations for a composition agreement between plaintiff’s creditors, who at that time comprised (1) his father, with a claim of $2,523.16; (2) Johnson & Company, a jobber, with a claim of $487.49; and (3) his wife, with a claim of $420 plus her claim for alimony.

At this juncture plaintiff and his father retained the defendants as attorneys. The parties disagree as to the extent of the retainer, but we must here accept the plaintiff’s version that defendants were retained for the triple purpose of protecting the claim of plaintiff’s father, procuring an adjustment of his wife’s claims, and “to take him [plaintiff] through bankruptcy.”

Negotiations for an amicable settlement of the multiple disputes having failed, defendants on May 15, 1936, prepared for plaintiff a voluntary petition in bankruptcy, with complete schedules, and *362 also had plaintiff sign in blank a printed petition for his discharge in bankruptcy. The then bankruptcy law required that the petition for discharge be filed not less than one month after the adjudication in bankruptcy and within twelve months thereafter, except where the time be extended not to exceed an additional six months for cause. Bankruptcy Act, § 14a, as amended by act of May 27, 1926, 44 St. 663, c. 406, § 6 (11 USCA, c. 3, § 32a).

Plaintiff’s petition for adjudication in bankruptcy was filed with the referee in bankruptcy on June 3, 1936, but his petition for discharge remained in the attorneys’ file in its original blank form and was never used. Plaintiff testified that defendant Swore “said he would file it [petition for discharge] when it was time to file it and when we had had the hearings of the bankruptcy.” Mr. Swore’s explanation is that the primary purpose of his preparing the petition in bankruptcy was to procure a pro rata distribution of the proceeds of the sale among all creditors, including plaintiff’s father, and when this was accomplished, the filing of the discharge petition was to be considered.

Swore also claimed that because of plaintiff’s admissions upon his first examination in bankruptcy that he had made a materially false financial statement to procure credit from Marks Manufacturing Company, a firm whose claim had been paid prior to bankruptcy, he, Swore, was of the opinion that no discharge in bankruptcy could be obtained. He so advised plaintiff by letter on June 30, 1936, and specifically asked plaintiff to “let us know what your wishes are.” Swore also wrote the father on the same date, stating: “My opinion is that as a result of his [plaintiff’s] testimony, he will probably not be entitled to a discharge.”

In reply to a later letter to him, plaintiff late in July 1936 wrote defendants:

“* * * Mr. Swore you go down and see my father and talk it over with him and whatever you and my father can decide is O. K. with me and after you have talked to him drop me a line *363 please. * * * Mr. Swore all I ash is do your test as to your way of helping my father especially.” (Italics supplied.)

From about September 1 to December 24, plaintiff was confined in jail for contempt in not paying alimony. During that period he engaged other attorneys to represent him in the divorce proceedings.

On February 3, 1937, the referee in bankruptcy allowed the father’s claim in full. Defendants immediately thereafter filed their claim for services rendered the bankrupt, crediting against the same the amount paid them at the time of the filing of the petition. This claim, under the law, could not include services in connection with the bankrupt’s petition for discharge. Gilbert’s Collier, Bankruptcy (4 ed.) § 1230. Other claims for expenses of administration were also allowed and paid and the balance then distributed pro rata among plaintiff’s creditors, including his father. The principal purpose of instituting the bankruptcy proceedings having been to procure a pro rata distribution of the bankrupt’s assets among his creditors, including his father, and such result being forecast when the father’s claim was allowed on February 3, 1937, no further attention was given to the filing of the discharge petition, either by the bankrupt or by his several attorneys, notwithstanding the year for filing the petition expired on June 5, 1937.

In 1940 plaintiff’s father died, leaving an estate in which plaintiff was entitled to share. Upon learning of the father’s death, Johnson & Company, one of plaintiff’s original creditors, brought suit against plaintiff on the unpaid balance of its claim and the unpaid balance of the claim of plaintiff’s former wife, which had been assigned to it. It was then discovered by plaintiff that no discharge in bankruptcy had been petitioned for or granted. The interest of plaintiff in his father’s estate was thereupon hastily transferred to his brothers and sisters, also heirs of the estate, though this would not have been necessary, because the heirs would have had the right of offset of the unpaid balance of the father’s *364 claim against the interest which plaintiff was entitled to as an heir. In re Estate of Lindmeyer, 182 Minn. 607, 235 N. W. 377. Johnson & Company were thereby effectively stymied and prevented from collecting their claim by attachment or garnishment ont of the father’s estate.

Plaintiff, not having been granted a discharge in bankruptcy, had no defense to the claim sued upon. Accordingly, upon advice of his present attorneys, he permitted the claims to be reduced to judgment by default. Immediately upon entry of the default judgment, he commenced the present action against his former attorneys to recover the amount of the judgment, including in the suit a second cause of action for expenses incurred in defending the Johnson suit. The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff for $992.32, the principal amount of the Johnson judgment, without interest. Nothing was allowed him on his second cause of action for attorneys’ fees and expenses.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 N.W.2d 819, 213 Minn. 360, 1942 Minn. LEXIS 530, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sjobeck-v-leach-minn-1942.