Thomas v. Mahin

230 P. 793, 76 Colo. 200, 1924 Colo. LEXIS 506
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedNovember 10, 1924
DocketNo. 10,853.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 230 P. 793 (Thomas v. Mahin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas v. Mahin, 230 P. 793, 76 Colo. 200, 1924 Colo. LEXIS 506 (Colo. 1924).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Denison

delivered the opinion of the court.

Lemuel Thomas had judgment against W. V. Thomas, P. H. Murray et al. in a suit brought by him for partition. They bring the case here for review.

One Alice Collins and her daughter, Rose Blue, were equal tenants in common of the realty in question—a lot and two houses, thereon in Trinidad. May 31, 1914, Mrs. Collins died and Rose Blue remained in possession. She afterwards married the defendant W. V. Thomas (no relation of Lemuel) and July 8, 1917, died, leaving her husband her only heir. July 24, 1917, W. V. Thomas was appointed administrator of her estate. He remained in possession, and, February 25, 1921, conveyed his interest to P. H. Murray. June 6, 1921, Lemuel Thomas brought this suit, claiming to be the son of Alice Collins and brother of Rose Blue Thomas and so entitled to an undivided one-fourth of the property.

There have been many changes in the parties plaintiff and defendant and many motions with reference to the pleadings which we do not find it necessary to notice.

September 23, 1921, an amended petition was filed. December 14, 1921, the defendants Thomas and P. H. Murray filed a motion to separate the causes of action and Decern *202 ber 14th this motion was overruled. December 20th they separately demurred; January 16, 1922, the court overruled these demurrers except as to certain paragraphs thereof which attacked the complaint for seeking relief as to personal property alleged to belong to Alice Collins at her death, and to have been converted by the defendants. The court seems consistently to have kept out of the case consideration of this personal property until the supplemental complaint was filed March 8, 1922. The defendants were then ruled to answer in ten days; they did not do so, and February 11th the plaintiff filed a praecipe for default. No entry of default appears except as recited in the decree. The decree, it is claimed by defendant in error, was rendered on February 20, 1922, but it was not filed until April 13th, and does not on its face show when it was rendered. The record does not tell us whether it is recorded among the proceedings of that day, February 20th. We think, however, there is enough in the record to show us that it must be regarded as having been then rendered, as plaintiff claims it was. It is referred to later in the records as having been rendered on that day. We cannot disregard such evidence.

March 8, 1922, leave was granted to file a supplemental petition, and pursuant to that leave, a petition was filed in which additional defendants were named. This so-called supplemental petition is partly an amendment to the original because it is not confined to facts which occurred after the action was commenced. Code 1911, § 80.

April 13 th the decree was filed. It appointed commissioners and on that day they reported that the property could not be partitioned and would have to be sold. April 14th the report was approved, the commissioners ordered to sell and convey and the cause was continued for their further report.

May 11th P. H. Murray answered the supplemental petition and filed a motion to set aside the judgment order filed on April 13th, and to set aside what had been done in pursuance thereof. There were supplemental affidavits *203 pursuant to this motion. The issues under that answer have never been tried.

December 11, 1922, there was another judgment rendered in which the exceptions to the report of sale by the commissioners which had been theretofore filed were overruled, the sale approved and a deed ordered.

December 20th, P. H. Murray filed a motion for a new trial. This motion was afterwards granted and the judgment of February 20th was set aside as to certain parts, viz.: The finding (a) that said amended petition and each and every allegation thereof are true and that the prayer of said petition should be granted; (b) that there are no unpaid debts against the estate of Alice Collins and a certain outstanding trust deed made by Collins and Blue had been paid in full; and (c) that the rents collected and held by W. V. Thomas and P. EL Murray amounted to $2,313, rightfully belonging to the plaintiff; and it was ordered that the parties might introduce evidence as to the questions involved in those parts of the decree that were set aside, and that thereupon further orders would be made. The motion, except as above, was overruled and either party was permitted to file pleadings to the questions for rehearing.

January 20, 1923, P. EL Murray answered the amended petition and, assuming that the setting aside of the general finding for plaintiff was a re-opening of the whole case, he denied that Lemuel Thomas had any interest in the premises. Upon a trial which came up October 1, 1923, the court refused to hear any testimony upon that point or upon anything else except in relation to the matters mentioned in the parts of the judgment which were set aside. That refusal is assigned for error.

At one stage of the proceedings the defendants moved to dismiss the suit because it was commenced without authority. Plaintiffs in error filed affidavits reciting the facts with reference thereto and upon trial the defendants offered to show (and were refused permission to do so) that Mahin, once the attorney for Lemuel Thomas, and now his *204 assignee and substituted for him, filed the suit in Lemuel Thomas’s name after he was discharged as his attorney; that Thomas had a written agreement with Mahin for his services at 20 per cent of the recovery; that after doing some work Mahin demanded fees and repudiated the agreement; that Thomas’s attorney in another state then wrote Mahin that if he would not carry out the agreement he was discharged; that Mahin then began this present suit and also sued Thomas in Trinidad for fees and attached his interest in the property in question and that Thomas then came to Trinidad and made a settlement of some sort with Mahin whereby he conveyed his interest to one Cox and Cox afterwards conveyed it to Mahin. Upon this record we are compelled to take these facts as true because undisputed.

October 1st, the day of trial, Mahin filed a replication claiming to have been substituted for Lemuel Thomas by order of September 20, 1923. To what answer that replication referred we do not know. The replication is intolerably long, full of irrelevant and improper matter and should have been stricken out on motion; but we cannot say that the denial of such motion is prejudicial error. October 20, 1922, judgment was rendered ordering the distribution of the rents collected and adjusting accounts.

1. One of the important points made by the plaintiff in error is that the whole suit is void ab initio, because begun without authority from the plaintiff. We must assume that the action was so begun. The plaintiff, however, appears to have subsequently conveyed his interests to one Cox and to have made some settlement without any step to dismiss the case. This is a ratification of the act of the attorney. The case of Bennie v. Triangle Ranch Co., 73 Colo. 586, 216 Pac. 718, is not in conflict with this conclusion; there one not an attorney at law began the suit for a plaintiff corporation. He never could be authorized.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
230 P. 793, 76 Colo. 200, 1924 Colo. LEXIS 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-mahin-colo-1924.