Spaids v. Cooley

113 U.S. 278, 5 S. Ct. 449, 28 L. Ed. 984, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1680
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 2, 1885
Docket171
StatusPublished

This text of 113 U.S. 278 (Spaids v. Cooley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spaids v. Cooley, 113 U.S. 278, 5 S. Ct. 449, 28 L. Ed. 984, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1680 (1885).

Opinion

Me. Justice Blatchfoed

delivered the opinion of the court. This suit was brought in the- Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, on the 13th of December, 1876, by Chauncey D. Spaids against Dennis N. Cooley, to recover $6,593.70, with interest from July 1st, 1868. The declaration contains the common money counts, and nothing more. There are two pleas, one denying indebtedness, and the other averring that the alleged cause of action did not accrue within three years before the suit. The plaintiff’s reply joins issue on the first plea, and, as to the second plea, avers that the defendant promised to pay the debt named in the declaration within three years next before the commencement of the suit. At the trial, the jury found “ the issue in favor of the defendant,” and there was a judgment accordingly, at special term. The plaintiff appealed to the general term, which affirmed the judgment, and he brings the case here by a writ of error.

There are four bills of exceptions. They show that the trial took place in March, 1880. The first one contains the following statement: “ The plaintiff, to sustain the issue on his part,' offered evidence tending to show, that, some time in December, 1866, he became acquainted with one John A. Hudnall, who had a claim against the United States for cotton captured by the army during the war of the rebellion, the proceeds-of which had gone into the treasury of the United *280 States; that said Hudnall had no means to employ counsel, and applied to him to undertake the collection of his, said Hudnall’s, claim against the United States ; that the plaintiff agreed to do so for a contingent fee of 30 per cent, of the amount to be recovered ; that plaintiff thereupon associated with himself one Joseph Parrish, to whom he agreed to give one-fourth of the said fee, if he would assist him in the collection of said claim; that, neither the said Parrish nor the plaintiff being a lawyer, they concluded to employ the defendant to prosecute the said case in the United States Court of Claims; that the defendant was absent from the city at the time ; that the contract made by the plaintiff with Hudnall was in writing, and the plaintiff thinks he inserted the name of the defendant, as the contracting party with Hudnall at the suggestion of ■said Parrish or one Weed, and because the plaintiff was not an attorney at law; that the plaintiff and said Parrish procured the form of a petition for instituting a suit in the Court of Claims, and prepared a petition, and had it printed and filed, according to the rules of the Court of Claims, signing the name of the defendant to said petition, as the attorney of record, without his knowledge or consent; that the plaintiff proceeded at once, under the rules of the said court, to take some testimony in the case on behalf of the claimant; that he employed Judge Merriman, a competent lawyer, to assist him in taking the testimonythat the case was partly prepared for trial before the return of the defendant to the city, and, when he came, the plaintiff and said Parrish called upon him, and informed him what they had done, and he approved of it, and agreed to take charge of and prosecute the said case; that Parrish'Said to the defendant, that, if successful, he could have a fee of five thousand dollars, which the defendant said would be entirely satisfactory; that they then left the agreement made with Hudnall with the defendant; that, subsequently, the defendant said to the plaintiff that the contract did not provide for making the fee a lien upon the judgment which might be recovered, and he wanted Hudnall to come and indorse this stipulation on the agreement; that the defendant, afterwards took into partnership W. Penn Clark, and the firm *281 of Cooley & Clark did go on with the case, and prosecute it to judgment, recovering about $44,000, which was paid to said Clark; that the money paid to said Clark was' about $44,000, and the plaintiff demanded from the defendant his share of the fee, which defendant, who was about leaving for his home in Iowa, said he had instructed his partner Clark to retain, and not pay over any of the money until the plaintiff had been settled with ; that said Clark did not pay him any part; and that the fee. retained amounted to about eleven thousand dollars. The plaintiff also gave testimony tending to show that the defendant had on several occasions promised to pay the plaintiff his share of said fee, and once in the city of Chicago, within three years before the commencement of this suit, had promised to pay said plaintiff, but that he had not done so. He testified, on cross-examination, that, when Cooley returned, he approached him and told him what the arrangement was between him and Parrish — that Parrish was to have one-fourth of his fee, out of which he was to pay Cooley ; that Cooley said that W'as satisfactory, and he would go on and prosecute the claim ; and that that was the arrangement made between him and Cooley. And the plaintiff further testified, that he rendered no services in the case at the request of Cooley or Clark, and rendered none at all after his first conversation with Cooley about it.”

The fourth bill of exceptions contains the following: “ And whereas the defendant'had pleaded the statute of limitations, and the plaintiff replied a new promise within the three years preceding the commencement of this suit, the plaintiff, to support this issue on his part, did testify in chief, as follows : I next saw Cooley — well, I have seen him so many times I cannot remember when the next time was; I saw him twice in Chicago: . . . My recollection is that I next saw him in 1874. Well, I cannot exactly fix the time ; it was during the oyster season, I remember ; either in the spring or fall. Well, from about the first of September to the latter part of April or the first of May; mean, between the first of September, 1874, and the last of April or first of May, 1875. I met him in the street, with his satchel in his hand. He said he was *282 going to Washington. I asked him if he intended to pay me that money. He replied, “ You should have had your money long ago, but my partner, Col. Clark, is behaving very badly; he has got a portion of the money into his hands and refuses to pay you.” He said : “ I am now on my way to Washington; I am going to get the best settlement I can from Clark, and upon my return I will positively pay you.” He said further that he did not know but he would have to pay me himself.’ And upon cross-examination, he further testified : ‘ Remember quite distinctly, I asked Cooley if he was going to pay me that money in the Hudnall case, or whether he was going to force me to further proceedings at law.’ He said: ‘You ought.'to have had that money long ago ; it would have been paid, but Clark is behaving very badly in the matter; he has part of it in his hands and refuses to pay you. I do not know but what I will have to pay you myself.’ That is as near precisely what he said as language can make it. I think, I cannot be much mistaken, that was, as near as possible, the very language he used. I said to Cooley: ‘ Are you going to pay me that money due me in that Hudnall cáse, or are you going to force me to further legal proceedings to get it ? ’ He said: ‘ Mr. Spaids, you ought to have had your money long ago, but Mr.

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113 U.S. 278, 5 S. Ct. 449, 28 L. Ed. 984, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1680, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spaids-v-cooley-scotus-1885.