Twohy v. Slate Creek Mining Co.

220 P.2d 1075, 36 Wash. 2d 801, 1950 Wash. LEXIS 360
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 19, 1950
Docket31287
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 220 P.2d 1075 (Twohy v. Slate Creek Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Twohy v. Slate Creek Mining Co., 220 P.2d 1075, 36 Wash. 2d 801, 1950 Wash. LEXIS 360 (Wash. 1950).

Opinion

*802 Hill, J.

We are here concerned with the question of whether the evidence supports a judgment for the respondents in the amount of twelve thousand five hundred dollars for attorneys’ fees.

The respondents had previously been before this court contending that, by the terms of an express contract, they were entitled to 125,000 shares of stock of the appellant, Slate Creek Mining Company, for legal services rendered to that company subsequent to November 5, 1940, by Edmund Paul Twohy, now deceased, and Frank Funkhouser. (They had each received 10,000 shares of stock for organizing the corporation and for other services rendered prior to November 5, 1940.) This court held, in Twohy v. Slate Creek Mining Co., 31 Wn. (2d) 668, 198 P. (2d) 832, that no express contract had been established but that the firm of Funkhouser and Twohy was entitled to recover the reasonable value of the services rendered; and the cause was remanded to the trial court with directions

“ . . . to render judgment in favor of respondents, and against appellant, Slate Creek Mining Company, in such amount as it finds due. If it becomes necessary for the trial court to take additional testimony to ascertain the reasonable value of such services, it is authorized to do so.”

The appellant seeks to raise numerous questions, all predicated upon its assumption that the matter was sent back for a new trial on the issue of the amount of compensation due the respondents, and that the appellant was therefore entitled: (1) to have the pleadings recast on the basis of an action for compensation; (2) to plead the statute of limitations; (3) to have a trial by jury; (4) to have the whole issue of the extent, character and value of respondents’ services retried, the obligation being upon the respondents to establish a prima facie case; and (5) to have the trial court make findings of fact.

However, we did not send the case back for a new trial on any issue. It is clear from our opinion in Twohy v. Slate Creek Mining Co., supra, that we were trying to avoid the expense and time involved in another trial where the right to some relief seemed apparent on the evidence already *803 before the court. While it was contemplated that the trial court might determine the reasonable value of the services rendered by the respondents on the evidence already before it, we left the door open for it to take additional testimony if it desired to do so.

We recognize that when a party seeks equitable relief but fails to establish the facts essential to give equity jurisdiction of the controversy (as where he fails to establish the existence of a contract which he seeks to have specifically enforced) the prevailing view is that the court may not award damages; and that if the rule were otherwise a litigant, by a pretended claim of equitable relief, might deprive his opponent of advantages incident to an action at law—for example, the constitutional right of trial by jury. 19 Am. Jur. 133, Equity, § 132. The case presented to us on the former hearing seemed to come within the rule that:

“If one sues in equity in good faith and fails to establish his cause, but shows a state of facts entitling him to recover at law, the court, having rightfully obtained jurisdiction for a proper purpose, may retain the cause and grant just such relief as, on the facts, the complainant appears to be entitled to, whether at law or in equity.” 19 Am. Jur. 133, Equity, § 133.

If appellant deemed our disposition of the case erroneous and believed that it would thereby be deprived of any or all of the five things to which it now claims to be entitled, it should have brought the effect of our decision to our attention by a petition for rehearing. We certainly cannot now reverse a trial court because it did exactly what we directed it to do and what we intended that it should do.

We cannot, however, find evidence that would support a judgment of twelve thousand five hundred dollars for the services performed for the appellant by the firm of Funkhouser and Twohy. That figure seems to be no more than a reach into the “wild blue yonder,” unless the trial court was attempting to preserve for the respondents the benefits of the contract which we had held they had not proved, by putting a value of ten cents a share on the 125,-000 shares of stock for which they had sued.

*804 There is available no detailed record of the various items of service rendered. At the trial the respondents offered what we gather from the record to be such a detailed statement, their counsel stating:

“Here is a list of it, appearing in these various matters, detailing each particular matter and what the matter was. I think that should go in. Mr. Funkhouser took this from their files.”

But the trial judge, having in mind that the respondents’ claim did not rest upon the value or extent of the services but upon an alleged contract for 125,000 shares of stock, commented, “What difference does that make here?” The offered document was excluded by the trial judge with the statement, “Nothing should go in unless it is relevant, competent and material.”

That ruling was correct on the issue then being tried, i. e., Did the firm of Funkhouser and Twohy have a specific contract for 125,000 shares of common stock as a fee for legal services?

When this court held that such a contract had not been established and sent the case back for the purpose of having the trial court fix an attorneys’ fee on the basis of the reasonable value of the services rendered, we left the door open for evidence as to the character, extent and value of those services; but the respondents saw no need for additional evidence and the appellant refused to introduce any. Taking the record as we find it, we have the following matters handled by the firm of Funkhouser and Twohy for the appellant (including services by Mr. Funkhouser after Mr. Twohy’s death in November, 1944):

A. McLennan litigation in Whatcom county.

In August of 1941 Mr. Funkhouser went to Bellingham and made an investigation, at the request of appellant company, because its check in payment of taxes on its mining properties in Whatcom county had been returned by the county treasurer with the statement that the taxes had already been paid by Margaret C. McLennan.

In September of 1941, M. C. McLennan, as owner and assignee of certain defaulted bonds issued by the New Light *805 Gold Mining Company (from which corporation a major portion of the property to be developed and operated by the appellant had been leased), commenced an action to recover a judgment for $21,500 on the bonds so held by her, and to enforce the same against the property covered by a mortgage given to secure payment of the bonds.

In a letter of October 8, 1941, Mr. Twohy stated that a thorough search of the authorities had been made, “particularly with reference to the right of McLennan to sue in her individual capacity,” and that a brief had been written. He urged that the demurrer be “seriously argued.” Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
220 P.2d 1075, 36 Wash. 2d 801, 1950 Wash. LEXIS 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/twohy-v-slate-creek-mining-co-wash-1950.