Stenchfield v. Robinson

22 F. Cas. 1246, 2 Hask. 381
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maine
DecidedFebruary 15, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 22 F. Cas. 1246 (Stenchfield v. Robinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stenchfield v. Robinson, 22 F. Cas. 1246, 2 Hask. 381 (circtdme 1880).

Opinion

POX, District Judge.

The complainant, a citizen of Massachusetts, brings this bill against the respondents, all citizens of Maine. The bill alleges that on the 23d day of July, 1SG3, a suit was commenced by Howard against the executrix of the last will of Kim-ball in the supreme court of Maine for the county of Kennebec, and that final judgment was recovered by the plaintiff for $14,723.50 on the 21st day of May, 1S77, and that the execution, which issued on the judgment, is now in the hands of Baker.

The complainant further charges that, during the pendency of said suit, certain agreements were entered into between him and Howard and one Matilda K. Page in relation thereto, whereby for good and valuable considerations between them, it was stipulated and agreed that the amount of such judgment as should be rendered in the suit should be divided between them in the proportion of one-third to each, as set out in a memorandum in the hand writing of Howard, annexed to this bill as Exhibit A; and that by virtue of said agreement a trust was created in behalf of the complainant for one-third of said judgment, $4.907.S5 with interest from May 21st, together with his reasonable disbursements in the cause and oilier causes amounting to $359.23, and that due demand has been made therefor; that on June 27th, Robinson paid over to Baker the proportion to which Howard and Matilda K. Page were entitled, and that Howard does not make any further claim to said execution.

It is also averred that Matilda K. Page long since deceased, and that Samuel Kidder and Henry R. Page, of Lowell, and citizens of Massachusetts, were duly appointed her executors, and that complainant is informed they have received the proportion of said judgment to which they as executors of M. K. Page are entitled, and that he is informed and believes that the time fixed by the statutes of Massachusetts within which action can be brought against said executors has long since elapsed, by reason-of which he is advised they are not necessary parties to this suit.

It is also averred that after verdict was rendered in said cause for the plaintiff, at the request of Howard, the complainant consented that Jos. Baker might be employed as an attorney in said cause, and thereby became acquainted with the complainant’s interest in the demand, and that he has since caused certain suits to be instituted against the complainant in Kennebec county, and caused said Robinson to be summoned therein as his trustee. Certain interrogatories are propounded to said Howard, and an injunction is asked to restrain Howard and Baker from collecting complainant’s third of the judgment, and that Baker maybe decreed to deliver up the execution to the complainant, and that Robinson, as administrator, be required to pay the complainant his one-third interest in Robinson’s hands in trust for complainant.

Exhibit A, which is without date, is as follows: “The proceeds of the suit now pending in the Supreme Judicial Court of Augusta, A. H. Howard v. Julia Kimball, Ex., are to be divided as follows, viz.: One-third is to be paid to M. K. Page, one-tliird to A. G. Stenchfield and one-third to Peter Atherton, except the claim for primage, and in that the said M. K. Page is to have no interest, that claim amounting in all to about $900, being for money advanced by Mr. Howard to Capt. Kimball to be paid over to Capt. Ryan, but not accounted for.”

It appears Howard had this large claim against Kimball’s estate which Stenchfield was employed to collect; that a suit was commenced by him and he afterwards removed to Massachusetts; that subsequently Howard on the seventh of March, 1868, assigned to Matilda K. Page, whose husband was originally the party to whom the Kimball debt was due, two-tliirds of the demand on condition of her defraying all expenses; that after-wards, in i-Iay, 1S70, a written agreement was entered nto by Mrs. Page with Stench-field, by which he was to recover for his services and fees, one-half of the amount which Mrs. Page should receive, together with the costs collected of defendant.

Two-thirds of the execution have been collected, but no part of this has been paid to complainant, and one question, here presented is, whether Mrs. Page should, from her third, pay the charges of the additional counsel, Baker and J. S. Abbott, who had been employed in the case, or whether they are in whole or in part to be borne by complainant. But underlying this is a still more important matter, not suggested by either party, but which cannot escape the attention of the court, and that is whether the contract between Mrs. Page and the complainant, whether it was as is claimed by him in his bill, or as it appears in the instrument executed by him and Mrs. Page jointly on May 20, 1870, is or not an utter nullity, wholly void in law for champerty and maintenance; or if not utterly void, is so unfair and. extortionate, that it can not be allowed to prevail, excepting as security- for a reasonable compensation for complainant’s actual services.

The only parties interested in this contract, [1248]*1248-whatever it may have been, are the complain■ant and Mrs. Page’s executors, the latter of whom have not appeared and been heard and ■are not represented before the court. If the •contract is to be construed by the court, and its legal effect determined, these parties should both be present, with an opportunity for them to present their respective allegations, produce whatever evidence they may have, and by their arguments advise the •court as to the validity of their respective claims. To some extent this has been done by the complainant; but no one has appeared in behalf of Mrs. Page’s executors, and the •court is in no manner advised as to what they xnay claim the contract and agreement to have been between Mrs. Page and the complainant, or as to the validity and effect of such a contract. All that is brought to the .knowledge of the court is, that Mrs. Page once was entitled to two-thirds of the amount collected from this demand; that some contract was afterwards made between her and the complainant respecting his services as an attorney in prosecuting this claim, the terms •of which are uncertain, and that two of the respondents by their pleadings insist that Mrs. Page’s executors are the parties who are interested in contesting this claim of complainant’s, and that they should be parties to •this proceeding, and have their rights to this fund determined, so that the respondents may be protected, not only against any claim of the complainant, but also froin any subsequent litigation which may hereafter arise with the estate of Mrs. Page; for it is very manifest that the executors of Mrs. Page, not being parties to this proceeding, will not be bound by any decree which mar be rendered herein, but may afterwards enforce their claims against Baker and the execution debt- or, without in any way being affected by any judgment here rendered.-

Baker is a mere stake-holder of the execution, professing himself ready to deliver it to ¿my party legally authorized to receive it; And Robinson is the judgment debtor, ready And desirous to pay the balance to any one who may be entitled to it, and who can give him such a discharge as will protect him as Administrator.

Can this court, as the case now stands, by its decree thus protect these parties against the demands of a stranger, whose claims, as they are now disclosed to the court, are certainly not entirely without foundation? If it •should hereafter be determined that the agreement between Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 F. Cas. 1246, 2 Hask. 381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stenchfield-v-robinson-circtdme-1880.