Von Kesler v. Baker

21 P.2d 1017, 131 Cal. App. 654, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 828
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 9, 1933
DocketDocket No. 7643.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 21 P.2d 1017 (Von Kesler v. Baker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Von Kesler v. Baker, 21 P.2d 1017, 131 Cal. App. 654, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 828 (Cal. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

WORKS, P. J.

This is an action to recover the sum of $11,755.61 for services rendered and traveling expenses incurred under a contingent contract to testify as an expert witness in certain litigation. Plaintiff had judgment and defendant appeals.

Baker was a fruit and berry packer. He had placed in cold storage with a certain company in Portland, Oregon, a large amount of loganberries. It was claimed by him that the berries were allowed to ferment through the negligence of the storage company. A part of the damaged product was still in the company’s warehouse, and a part had been shipped to Chicago. Baker contemplated the commencement of two actions for damages, one to cover the berries remaining in the storage company’s warehouse, the other to cover those which had been shipped, although but one action was at first under consideration by him. Von Kesler was a fruit and berry broker in Chicago, and had represented Baker there for many years. The contemplated actions were commenced, Von Kesler attended the trial of each, and testified as an expert witness in each. He came to Oregon, where the actions were tried in the United States court and his traveling expenses were incurred because of his trips from Chicago to Oregon and return. Judgment was procured in one action for the sum of $23,000, in the other for $19,649.10. The amount of these judgments was paid to Baker before the commencement of the present action.

At the trial of this action counsel for Von Kesler made a preliminary statement to the jury. He announced to the triers of fact that he expected to prove the following: In December, 1929, Von Kesler met Baker, at the request of the latter, in Seattle. After some preliminary conferences and investigations, Baker said to Von Kesler, “I will have to bring this suit . . . and I will have to have your testi *656 mony as an expert; you are the only one I can prove my case by, and you stand by me, Von, and I will give you 25 per cent of any verdict I may get. If the cases are not tried, I will give you 20 per cent.” In the spring of 1921 Baker called at the office of Von Kesler in Chicago and told him that his attorney had determined to begin the two actions above mentioned, instead of one. Baker then said, “but in any ease, Von, I want you to testify, I want you to be my expert in that case; you are the only one that knows the facts, and you are the only one who can prove them from the standpoint of an expert, and I will pay you 25 per cent if we try the cases, and 20 per cent if we settle them.” Von Kesler said he would be there when the cases were called. The first case was tried about June or July, 1922, the second “along in the summer” of 1926. On each occasion Von Kesler arrived on the scene some time before the case was called—his first arrival was seven days in advance—and in the two interims he had numerous consultations with Baker and his counsel. In short, the statement to the jury was to the effect that Von Kesler fully performed his part of the agreement. We premise here to say, also, that the evidence showed the same thing.

Von Kesler’s testimony fully justified the assertions made in the opening statement, but he testified also that in the conversations between him and Baker, the latter said he expected Von Kesler to testify to the truth at the trial of the two actions. Indeed, the opening statement did not show that he contracted to do otherwise.

Appellant suggests to us—we do not say “contends”, for the point is one which cannot directly avail him, as it affects alone the public Welfare—that the agreement upon which this action is founded was void as against public policy. If the contract was void, it can be so only because the compensation promised to be made to Von Kesler was payable upon the contingency that the actions were to be settled or won. Appellant seeks to put upon some of the testimony a construction which would give to the compact even a more sinister complexion, but we think the view thus taken is untenable.

In an action before the Supreme Court the plaintiff sued to recover for services rendered as a detective in procuring evidence to be used in a divorce suit. The court said:

*657 “While in the transcript there are various assignments of error, the sole point urged here by appellant for a reversal is that the contracts made the basis of the cause of action and as found by the court are contrary to public policy and void, and no recovery should have been had upon them. In elaboration of this proposition of law appellant asserts that any contract between parties which has for its object the dissolution of the marriage relation, or facilitating that result, is contrary to good morals and void; that further, any contract having for its object the procurement of testimony for the purpose of securing a divorce, is illegal and void.” The opinion of the court also contains the following : ‘ ‘ [A] contract is void whereby one agrees to obtain or procure testimony of certain facts which will successfully support or defeat a lawsuit, or which provides that payment to the party procuring such testimony is to be contingent upon the result of the action for which he is engaged to procure it. It is the element of payment contingent upon the success of the litigation in which the evidence is to be produced, or the fact that the agreement is to procure evidence not of facts as they exist, but of particular facts necessary to the success of the party litigant who contracted for their production, which vitiates the contract. It is the contingency on the one hand and the agreement to furnish a given set of facts essential to a successful litigation on the other, and both of which in their nature are calculated to induce false charges and the production of perjured testimony, to subvert the truth and pervert justice through fraud, trickery, and chicanery at the hands of unscrupulous private detectives on [or] other conscienceless persons, which has impelled the law, with wisdom, to declare such contracts illegal” (Hare v. McGue, 178 Cal. 740 [174 Pac. 663, L. R. A. 1918F, 1099]). It will be observed that in this passage, by the use of the disjunctive in two places, the court declares such a contract as the one under discussion to be void if the payment to be made is “contingent on the success of the litigation” in which the evidence is to be used. It is true that the court then held that the contract before it was not subject to the condemnation pronounced by the language quoted. Nevertheless, and if the ■ passage be regarded as obiter, it is thoroughly in accord with our views concerning the agreement between Yon Kesler and *658 Baker. The decision of the Supreme Court is in part quoted by this court in Harris v. Moore, 102 Cal. App. 413 [283 Pac. 76, 78], although there the agreement was principally condemned as being one “to furnish a particular state of facts”, and not evidence known or suspected to exist. The facts stated by the court show, however, that a bonus was agreed to be paid, contingently, upon the production of a certain item of evidence to be developed in the future, although the opinion recites that “there is no contention that the bonus was earned”.

Let us return to the conditions presented by the instant case.

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Bluebook (online)
21 P.2d 1017, 131 Cal. App. 654, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 828, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/von-kesler-v-baker-calctapp-1933.