Smith Sons Lumber Co. v. Steiner, Crum Weil

85 So. 758, 204 Ala. 306, 1920 Ala. LEXIS 146
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedApril 22, 1920
Docket3 Div. 435.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 85 So. 758 (Smith Sons Lumber Co. v. Steiner, Crum Weil) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith Sons Lumber Co. v. Steiner, Crum Weil, 85 So. 758, 204 Ala. 306, 1920 Ala. LEXIS 146 (Ala. 1920).

Opinions

GARDNER, J.

.This litigation arises out of a disagreement between client and counsel concerning compensation for services rendered by the defendants as attorneys for the plaintiff in the suit which reached this court styled Tillis v. Smith Sons Lumber Co., 188 Ala. 122, 65 South. 1015. The contentions of the respective parties to the cause are sufficiently disclosed by reference to count 3 and the special plea which appear in the statement of the case.

The contract of employment was in writing. It provided for the payment of $3,500 as an absolute fee regardless of results. It further appears that the amount allowed by the plaintiff in the transaction in which it acquired the stocks and bonds mentioned in the pleading was the sum of $53,300; anil the contract of employment provided for additional compensation of 15 per cent, upon this amount should that be the recovery had, or, in the alternative, that if the plaintiff should retain the bonds and there should be a recovery for the difference between the above sum and the actual value of said bonds at the tim'e of their acquisition, then plaintiff agreed to pay an additional compensation of an amount equal to 15 per cent, of the full sum of $53,300, less the sum of $3,500 previously paid as an absolute fee.

The result of the suit was a judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $22,500, and it is the contention of the defendants, as set up in the special plea, that such judgment is conclusive against the plaintiff in this action to the effect that the amount of recovery represented the difference between the sum of $53,300 and the actual value of the bonds at the time of their acquisition.

[1] If we are to look to the charge of the court for the issues which were determined in the trial of that cause as set up in said plea, it would appear that other elements entered into the consideration in the determination as to the value of the stocks and bonds; but, aside from this, the judgment recovered in that cause cannot be held as res adjudicata in this for the reason that the defendants here were not parties or privies to that .suit.- The following of our cases are conclusive to this effect: Fid. & Dep. Co. v. Robertson, 136 Ala. 379, 34 South. 933; Holland v. Fairbanks-Morse & Co., 166 Ala. 198, 51 South. 931; Jones v. Adler, 183 Ala. 435, 62 South. 777.

The defendants do not controvert the correctness of the holdings of the above cases, but insist that they are not applicable to the instant ease. Their' argument is that the defense set up in plea 3 is not a plea of res adjudieata or estoppel, but is predicated upon the proposition that, by the terms of the contract of employment itself, the result of the litigation between the plaintiff and Tillis necessarily and conclusively fixes the basis of plaintiff’s liability to the defendants; and that the agreement was made with reference to the result of that case as much so as if it had been written into the agreement itself. It is thus seen that while it is conceded under the foregoing authorities the pica is not properly one of res adjudicata, yet the effect and final result thereof is the same, for the plea is to the effect that plaintiff is conclusively bound by the judgment rendered.

Reduced to its last analysis, the insistence of the defendant turns upon the construction to be given the words “recover the difference” used in said contract, and stated in brief in the following language, “that the contract, in legal effect and meaning, is the same as if there had been inserted, immediately after the words ‘recover the difference,’ the words ‘as determined in the litigation to be brought, for that purpose,’ ” and that therefore the judgment in the former suit is conclusive here because the plaintiff had so agreed.

[2, 3] The contract is to be construed as a whole, and we are to gather the intention of the parties from the four corners of the instrument, giving to the language used its natural and ordinary meaning. 3 Michie, Dig. 334. The contract shows upon its face that the valuation of the stocks and bonds here in question was fixed at $53,300 when acquired by the plaintiff, and for the recovery of this sum which would reimburse them, or a recovery of the difference between this sum and the value of the bonds at the time it acquired the same, it was willing to pay additional compensation. While it is doubtless true that the litigation was anticipated, yet there is nothing in the instrument to disclose an intention on the part of the plaintiff to be conclusively bound, so far as this contract of employment was concerned, by the result of that litigation, as irrevocably fixing the amount as would determine the question of additional compensation. It may be readily seen that by such construction of the agreement of employment the recovery may have been such an amount as to have been fully absorbed by the agreed compensation for services. Indeed, we may go still further, as suggested in brief, and point out that under such construction of the contract the recovery may have been even less than the fee, and the plaintiff have been the loser thereby. As said by this court in Birmingham Waterworks Co. v. Windham, 190 Ala. 634, 67 South. 424:

“Contracting parties usually engage upon rational considerations and to reasonable effects and ends; and, when the courts find it necessary to construe instruments of obligation, it *310 is ever proper, and often essential, for them to assume, at least prima facie, that the unreasonable and irrational was not the contractual intent.”

It would appear, therefore, such construction would he unreasonable; and to bring the case within the purview of the foregoing rule we must assume, at least prima facie, that the parties engaged “upon rational considerations and to reasonable effects and ends.” The plaintiff was evidently working to such result, by which it would be made whole as to the transaction, the subject-matter of the litigation. This affirmatively appears upon the face of the contract which defines what is meant by a favorable determination of the cause to the plaintiff, viz., $53,-300, and expressly stipulates an additional ' compensation of 15 per cent, upon this sum if that is the sum recovered. Had there been a rescission and suit brought for $53,300, it could hardly be questioned that, under the very terms of the contract, to authorize the additional compensation the full sum must be recovered. But the parties did what the contract contemplated — retained the bonds and sued for the difference — and it is stipulated that additional compensation would also be ■paid upon the full sum of $53,300 should the recovery be the difference between that sum and the actual value of the bonds at the time of the transaction. It is quite clear the contract did not contemplate that a different rule would obtain as to this extra compensation, dependent merely upon the form of action to be brought, and it is not so insisted upon, this appeal.

The plaintiff insists that the recovery did not compensate it for the actual difference between the value of the bonds and the amount allowed on the transaction, and this is a question of fact which it seeks to submit to the jury. To our minds, the contract conclusively shows that it was the manifest purpose as a condition precedent to the additional compensation that plaintiff be made whole, and that to produce this result there must be a recovery either of the sum of $53,300 or its equivalent, as above indicated.

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

Related

Dunlap v. MacKe
171 So. 721 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1937)
Birmingham Electric Co. v. Kirkland
118 So. 640 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1928)
Steiner, Crum & Weil v. Smith Sons Lumber Co.
93 So. 399 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 So. 758, 204 Ala. 306, 1920 Ala. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-sons-lumber-co-v-steiner-crum-weil-ala-1920.