State Ex Rel. Thompson, Hine & Flory v. Council of Bedford

174 N.E. 601, 37 Ohio App. 265, 9 Ohio Law. Abs. 404, 1930 Ohio App. LEXIS 419
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 23, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 174 N.E. 601 (State Ex Rel. Thompson, Hine & Flory v. Council of Bedford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Thompson, Hine & Flory v. Council of Bedford, 174 N.E. 601, 37 Ohio App. 265, 9 Ohio Law. Abs. 404, 1930 Ohio App. LEXIS 419 (Ohio Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

Vickery, P. J.

In this action it is sought to have issued a writ of mandamus ordering the village of Bedford and, its council, the various members being named therein, and its clerk and treasurer, to issue a warrant in the sum of $5,200 payable to Thompson, Hiñe & Flory, the relators, attorneys, that amount being the compensation which had been allowed said firm by the common pleas court, first, in an order of $3,400 for the original trial of the action hereinafter *266 mentioned, and, second, in the snm of $1,800, for services performed by said Thompson, Hiñe & Flory, as lawyers in the Court of Appeals, to which court said original case had been carried, and also in the Supreme Court, to which court the case had likewise been carried by the defendant in the original action.

This suit in mandamus invokes the original jurisdiction of this court, and is of the utmost moment, and, in order to arrive at a correct understanding, it is necessary to go back to the litigation in the prosecution of which the attorneys earned or claimed to have earned the fees allowed them by the courts.

It seems that Bedford is one of the villages of Cuyahoga county, and is governed by a council and a mayor, and has various officers, one of which is a village engineer by the name of Bayard T. Wright. Prior to the beginning of the litigation out of which this suit arises, Bayard T. Wright had, in direct violation of law, and the council had, in direct violation of law, apparently in order to evade the law which provides that no officer of a municipality should be interested in any contract of the municipality, let certain contracts to Engineer Wright, and he in turn had employed as inspectors upon those contracts several of the various members of the then village council; and these members of the village council were on Wright’s pay roll, and Wright, as engineer, was a contractor working for the village, ostensibly at least, although as engineer he was already on the pay roll of the village.

This matter had been going along for some period of time, and it was so flagrantly in violation of law that it aroused the antagonism of several of the citi *267 zens of Bedford, among whom were Arthur H. Clark and John Freeman, who sought to stop this illegal practice and to recover back money which they assert had been illegally paid to the contractor Wright under this sort of an arrangement, which, on the surface, seemed to be collusive between the village council and Engineer Wright; so the village solicitor was asked by the two taxpayers on behalf of all the taxpayers to institute suit to recover the money which had been illegally paid to Wright under this sort of an arrangement. The solicitor refused to bring suit, whereupon the taxpayers employed the firm of Thompson, Hiñe & Flory, and themselves brought the action in the common pleas court of Cuyahoga county. The action was bitterly fought in all its angles, but the trial resulted in a verdict for the taxpayers on behalf of the village in the sum of $15,753.41. A motion for a new trial was made and overruled, and a judgment was entered upon this verdict. Thé common pleas court that tried the case thereupon allowed what it regarded as reasonable attorney fees for Thompson, Hiñe & Flory, in the sum of $3,400, which allowance of attorney fees was carried into the judgment. The defendant in the case below carried that case to the Court of Appeals, and it was heard by a foreign Court of Appeals sitting here by designation, and, after full argument and due consideration, that court affirmed the judgment of the common pleas court. Wright, the defendant, not being satisfied, carried the case to the Supreme Court, and it was admitted into the Supreme Court, and the Supreme Court, after full hearing, affirmed the judgment of the common pleas court and of the Court of Appeals *268 (119 Ohio St, 462, 164 N. E., 512) and after-wards refused the defendant a rehearing; and its mandate to the common pleas court directed the common pleas court to fix an additional fee for the counsel, which was ultimately fixed by the common pleas court in the sum of $1,800, so the $3,400 that had been allowed by the common pleas court originally, together with $1,800 that had been subsequently allowed for services performed by the firm in the Court of Appeals, and in the Supreme Court, made the sum total $5,200.

It is needless to say that this case was bitterly fought by the defendants through all the courts, and the attorneys representing the taxpayers so diligently and successfully pressed the claim of their clients that it resulted in the return to the village treasury of a sum in the neighborhood of $16,000. which had been wrongfully and illegally diverted therefrom.

Then comes a situation that is hardly to be paralleled in the history of litigation, because, after the battle had been fought successfully by the plaintiffs, and unsuccessfully by the defendant, through all the courts of the state, each court finding that the plaintiffs had the right to recover, and that the defendant had illegally drawn this money from the village treasury, it was sought by the council of the village and its officers, acting apparently in collusion with the defendant, to defeat the right of the attorneys to gain the usufruct of their service after they had so ably and conscientiously represented the taxpayers and recovered from its recalcitrant officer a large sum of money that had been illegally paid to him; it was sought, I say, by what appears to be *269 a collusive arrangement to defeat the right of the attorneys to gain the usufruct of their services. And so the council passed a resolution authorizing the clerk of the village to receive from Wright the sum of money which had been adjudged against him, and which stood as a judgment against him on the records of the Cuyahoga county courts, and to receipt the docket for such sum of money, thus releasing Wright from the necessity of paying into court the sum of money which had been adjudged that he should pay. It was sought by this process to defeat the right of an attorney’s lien upon the funds realized, and the council thereafter refused to pay the money that had been adjudged by the courts to be due Thompson, Hiñe & Flory out of the proceeds which they had recovered for the taxpayers of the village, and continued thus to refuse the claim on the ground that it was public money, and that council could not pay public money out in that sort of a way — seeming to have lost sight of the fact of the illegal payment of public money in the first instance, which was recovered only by the hard work and industry of the firm of lawyers who are the relators in this suit. So, in order to recover the money which they had so richly earned, the lawyers were compelled to bring a suit in mandamus to compel the village to pay the money that was due them, there being no property that was subject to a levy.

The argument upon this suit has been extremely interesting, and the case is of such momentous concern to the entire public that the writer of this opinion has gone into details because of the importance of the litigation.

It is claimed, first, that there is no statute author *270

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Related

Shillito v. City of Spartanburg
51 S.E.2d 95 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1948)
Thomas v. City of Euclid
182 N.E. 605 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1931)
State ex rel. Thompson, Hine & Flory v. Bedford Council
9 Ohio Law. Abs. 404 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
174 N.E. 601, 37 Ohio App. 265, 9 Ohio Law. Abs. 404, 1930 Ohio App. LEXIS 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-thompson-hine-flory-v-council-of-bedford-ohioctapp-1930.