Thoresen v. Thoresen

12 N.E.2d 28, 293 Ill. App. 168, 1937 Ill. App. LEXIS 374
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 31, 1937
DocketGen. No. 39,731
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 12 N.E.2d 28 (Thoresen v. Thoresen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thoresen v. Thoresen, 12 N.E.2d 28, 293 Ill. App. 168, 1937 Ill. App. LEXIS 374 (Ill. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

Mr. Justice John J. Sullivah

delivered the opinion of the court.

George T. Thoresen, plaintiff, filed a complaint for divorce on March 16, 1936, against his wife, Margaret Thoresen (hereinafter referred to as defendant), and she filed a cross complaint for divorce against him March 18, 1936. The decree was entered on the cross complaint March 19, 1936, in favor of Margaret Thoresen, granting her a divorce, dismissing plaintiff’s complaint for want of equity, and, after reciting that the parties had entered into a settlement of their property rights, ordered that plaintiff pay defendant $3,000, “in full settlement of all claims for alimony” and $250 “in full settlement of all claims for attorneys’ fees.” Defendant acknowledged in open court the receipt of the foregoing amounts. The decree also awarded defendant a small cottage at Long Lake, Illinois, of the approximate value of $1,200, and half of the family furniture. After the decree had been entered in the divorce proceeding Olaf E. Bay and Charles H. Pease (hereinafter for convenience referred to as petitioners) filed a petition therein seeking to enforce an attorney’s lien for fees against George T. Thoresen, pursuant to a notice served on him March 14,1936, which recited their alleged employment as attorneys by defendant, Margaret Thoresen. May 14, 1937, an order was entered denying the petition of Olaf E. Bay and Charles H. Pease for attorneys’ fees and June 7,1937, an order was entered denying their motion to vacate the order of May 14, 1937. This appeal seeks to reverse the orders of May 14, 1937, and June 7, 1937.

The petition'of attorneys Bay and Pease for the enforcement of their purported lien for fees against plaintiff in the divorce proceeding alleged substantially that they were lawyers, duly licensed and practicing in the courts of the State of Illinois; that on or about February 27, 1936, Margaret Thoresen “employed them as her attorneys to prosecute and handle her claim- and demand for a divorce and for alimony and support and adjustment of property rights between her and the above named George T. Thoresen, her husband”; that “no definite amount was fixed or agreed upon between your petitioners and said Margaret Thoresen as a fee or compensation for the service to be rendered in that behalf by your petitioners, but it was agreed and understood that your petitioners should receive the reasonable value of the services to be rendered in that behalf”; that pursuant to said employment they proceeded to investigate the financial circumstances of George T. Thoresen and to negotiate with his attorney “to obtain a proper adjustment of all property rights between said Thoresens, and for the purpose of obtaining from said George T. Thoresen a fair and satisfactory amount in cash and transfer of property, suitable and proper in consideration of all the facts regarding the respective rights and interests of said parties”; that “while said investigation and negotiations were pending” and after service of the notice on plaintiff of petitioners’ claim for an attorney’s lien on plaintiff, the latter’s attorney concluded through Harry X. Cole, another attorney, who had been employed by Mrs. Thoresen, a settlement “of her said- claim and demand whereby said Margaret Thoresen . . . received from said George T. Thoresen in lieu of alimony in gross and full settlement and adjustment of all property rights and claims on her part against said George T. Thoresen, the sum of .$3,000 in cash, a summer cottage at Long Lake, Illinois, said to be worth about $1,200, and one-half of the furniture formerly possessed and used by said Thoresens prior to their separation”; that in the performance of their duties under their employment by Margaret Thoresen the petitioners spent in excess of twenty hours time in services rendered in her behalf, and that the reasonable value of such services is more than $200; that March 14,1936, they served upon plaintiff by registered mail a notice of their claim for an attorney’s lien in the following form:

“You are hereby notified that we, the undersigned, Olaf E. Bay and Charles H. Pease, have been retained and employed by your wife, Margaret Thoresen, as her attorneys, to prosecute and handle her claim and demand for a divorce, for alimony and support and adjustment of property rights between you and her, and that we are interested in said claim and demand to the extent of the reasonable value of the services rendered and to be renderd in that behalf; and we have and hereby claim a lien upon her said claim and demand for a reasonable fee for the services so rendered and to be rendered.” The petition concludes with a prayer that the petitioners’ “rights and interest in the premises may be adjudicated, that your petitioners may be found and decreed to have an attorneys’ lien by virtue of the statute in such case made and provided upon the said claim and demand and the proceeds of settlement thereof, for the value of their said services and expenses as aforesaid, and that the amount thereof may be found and determined and that the said George T. Thoresen may be adjudged and decreed to pay your petitioners the amount so determined.”

Leave was granted to file the petition March 24, 1936, and hearings were had on it by the- judge who entered the divorce decree. It is only necessary to say as to this phase of the proceeding that after that judge had taken the matter under advisement he was assigned to the criminal court and did not render a decision on the petition. May 24, 1937, upon petitioners’ motion to set their petition for hearing, Judge John C. Lewe, to whom the cause was at that time assigned, declined to do so and entered the following order:

“On motion of Solicitors Olaf E. Bay and Charles H. Pease for attys fees, the Court having heard the arguments of respective counsel & being fully advised, “It is hereby ordered that petition of Olaf E. Bay & Charles H. Pease for attorney’s fees herein be and the same hereby is denied. ’ ’

June 7, 1937, upon presentation of petitioners’ motion to vacate the order of May 24, 1937, denying their petition for the enforcement of their purported attorneys ’ lien for fees, this order was entered:

“On Motion of Charles H. Pease to vacate and set aside order of May 14th, Court having jurisdiction and being fully advised that Attorneys Charles H. Pease, Alfred O. Erickson, and Harry X. Cole, appeared in Court on May 14th, on motion of Charles H. Pease to set his petition for fees and costs for hearing, and the Court at that time having gone into the matter fully and having heard the arguments of each of the respective three attorneys, and the Court having found at that time upon said full hearing that the Court had no jurisdiction to grant fees and costs to Attorneys Charles H. Pease and Olaf E. Bay, and the Court having found that said attorneys were not entitled to attorney’s fees and costs in this case;

“It is therefore ordered that motion to vacate and set aside order of May 14th, be, and the same hereby is denied.”

Petitioners’ contentions as stated in their brief are “that, having been employed by Margaret Thoresen to prosecute her claim against her husband, and having given him notice of their claim for lien, they became entitled to a lien on her claim and demand; and that he should have reserved in the subsequent settlement sufficient money to cover such lien, and he having failed to do so, petitioners are entitled to a money decree or judgment against George T.

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Bluebook (online)
12 N.E.2d 28, 293 Ill. App. 168, 1937 Ill. App. LEXIS 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thoresen-v-thoresen-illappct-1937.