Stephenson v. Gaines

291 S.W. 602
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 8, 1926
DocketNo. 7639. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 291 S.W. 602 (Stephenson v. Gaines) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stephenson v. Gaines, 291 S.W. 602 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinions

* Writ of error granted April 27, 1927. The law firm of Gaines, Quin, Harley Gaines brought this action against W. M. Stephenson to recover the amount of certain promissory notes executed by Stephenson in settlement of attorney's fees owing to the firm. The obligations sued on were of a series of 13 notes executed on December 15, 1924, the first to mature being for the amount of $1,000, the next 11 for $500 each, and the thirteenth and last for $566.15; the whole series aggregating the amount of $7,066.15. The notes contained a provision for accelerated maturity in event of default in the payment of any one of the series. It was alleged by the plaintiffs below that the first 5 of the notes were paid at maturity, but that default was made upon the sixth note, whereupon the plaintiffs elected to mature the unpaid obligations, aggregating $4,066.15, and brought this suit on them. Stephenson in his answer pleaded failure of consideration and damages, but the court sustained general and special demurrers to those defenses, and, upon proof of the execution, delivery, and nonpayment of the notes, directed a jury verdict for the plaintiffs. From the judgment based upon this verdict, Stephenson has appealed.

In his special answer, which was stricken out on demurrer, Stephenson alleged the case now to be stated, and which must be taken as true for the purpose of testing the demurrers, which is the only purpose of this appeal:

On August 5, 1924, the parties agreed in writing upon attorney's fees to be paid appellees by appellant as follows: In the cases of —

Nichols v. Stephenson ...................... $5,000 00 Southern Natural Gas Co. v. Grubstake Co. .. 5,000 00 State v. South Texas Co. ................... 1,500 00 Choice v. Grubstake Co. .................... 1,000 00 Grubstake Co. v. Coyle ..................... 500 00

Total ..................................... $13,000 00

Of this amount $2,000 was paid at the time, and a few weeks later — that is, on September 22, 1924 — appellees sued appellant to recover the balance of $11,000 (plus $66.15, which, being immaterial to this appeal, will not be included in the calculation or discussion in this opinion). On the following December 24, the parties entered into a settlement of the matters involved in that suit, whereby, in consideration of dismissal, appellant agreed to pay appellees $1,000 cash, which was then paid, and $7,000, to be evidenced by the series of 13 notes described in the first paragraph of this opinion. This settlement was arrived at by eliminating from consideration the fee of $1,000 in the case of Choice v. Grubstake Company, because it had been embraced in the previous settlement and in appellees' petition by mistake, and by excluding the fees of $1,500 in the case of State v. South Texas Company, and $500 in the case of Grubstake v. Coyle, which were left open without prejudice for future negotiations between the parties. In other words, the only matters actually embraced in the compromise and settlement were the fees of $5,000 in each of the cases of Nichols v. Stephenson and Southern Natural Gas Company v. Grubstake Company.

In pursuance of the foregoing compromise agreement, appellant paid appellees $1,000 in cash and executed and delivered his 13 promissory notes as provided, whereupon, in further pursuance of the agreement appellees took a nonsuit, and the cause was dismissed. As has been shown, appellant paid the first 5 of the series of 13 notes provided for and executed in pursuance of the compromise agreement, leaving unpaid the remaining eight notes, aggregating $4,000. It is upon these unpaid obligations that the instant suit was brought, to which appellant as the maker of the notes set up the matters of defense now to be considered.

In his answer to appellees' petition in the present case, appellant alleged the facts above set out, and sought to defeat recovery by showing a failure of consideration for the fee of $5,000 agreed upon in the case of Nichols v. Stephenson. It was alleged that appellees were employed by appellant and represented him in that suit; that they tried the case in June and July, 1924, when judgment was rendered therein against him; that appellees represented to appellant that the adverse judgment "could be readily reversed" in event of appeal; that upon this representation appellant employed appellees to prosecute the appeal, and that the fee of $5,000 agreed upon was to compensate appellees for "fighting the case through all the available courts." It is then alleged in great detail that appellees negligently failed to file the record of the case in the Court of Civil Appeals within the time prescribed by law, whereby the appeal was dismissed (272 S.W. 220 [Tex.Com.App.] 286 S.W. 197), and that as a result of this negligence appellant lost his right of appeal, to his great damage; that he had paid appellees $1,000 of the agreed fee of $5,000 in the case, which more than compensated them for the services they had actually performed in the case, the value of which had been lost by reason of the negligent failure of appellees to prosecute the appeal; wherefore the consideration for the notes sued on had failed in so far as they covered the agreed fee in that particular case.

Appellant further alleged by way of cross *Page 604 action that, because of the negligent conduct of appellees in the case of Nichols v. Stephenson, appellant was required to pay $1,010 stenographer's fees and $335 court costs, in which amounts, plus the cash fee paid appellees in that case, he had been damaged, and he prayed for judgment against appellees in the amount of those items. The allegations of appellant setting forth the plea of failure of consideration and for damages were stricken out by the trial court on demurrers urged by appellees, on the grounds that said allegations constituted no defense to the suit and that the matters set up by way of cross-action could not be pleaded in set-off against appellees' suit upon the notes in question. Thus arise the two questions involved in the appeal.

It will be observed from the stricken allegations that in the compromise agreement all matters in controversy were postponed for further negotiations and adjustment, except the fees in the two cases of Nichols v. Stephenson and Southern Gas Company v. Grubstake Company, which were confirmed in the compromise agreement in the amount of $5,000 in each case, of which $2,000 had been paid, leaving a balance of $8,000, and that the notes sued on were given in settlement of that balance. No question is made as to the validity and finality of the amount fixed as the fee in the Southern Gas Company Case, and therefore the controversy is confined to the enforceability of the obligation of appellant to pay the full amount of the fee fixed in the case of Nichols v. Stephenson.

It therefore becomes necessary, first, to determine the conclusiveness of the settlement of the Nichols v. Stephenson fee as fixed by the settlement agreement and the judgment of dismissal of the former suit resulting from that agreement. Was that settlement and the judgment of dismissal based thereon, so conclusive upon the parties and of the controversy as to cut off a plea of failure of consideration for the agreement? We are of the opinion, and so hold, that the judgment based on that agreement had such effect, and was conclusive upon the parties in all matters embraced in the agreement.

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291 S.W. 602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stephenson-v-gaines-texapp-1926.