Weimer v. Bockel

194 A. 318, 128 Pa. Super. 385, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 138
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 26, 1937
DocketAppeal, 194
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 194 A. 318 (Weimer v. Bockel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weimer v. Bockel, 194 A. 318, 128 Pa. Super. 385, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 138 (Pa. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion by

James, J.,

D. P. Weimer and John M. Bennett, a law partnership, brought an action of assumpsit against J. R. Bockel to recover for legal services rendered by them. Defendant’s main defense was that the services were performed for and on behalf of the Majestic Coal Company, of which he was the vice-president. The jury rendered a verdict for the full amount of the claim. Defendant’s motions for a new trial and judgment n. o. v. were overruled, and from the judgment entered on the verdict, this appeal was taken.

*387 The assignments of error raise two questions: First, that the evidence was insufficient to warrant the jury in finding that the defendant had made himself personally liable for the services rendered; and, second, the court erred in refusing to charge that under the facts a presumption existed that the defendant was not binding himself but was binding the coal company for payment of the services rendered.

Selecting from the testimony submitted facts most favorable to the plaintiffs, we may summarize them as follows: Defendant owned 85 per cent of the stock of the Majestic Coal Company, the remaining 15 per cent being equally held by other officers of the corporation, to wit: M. E. Brennan, president; J. F. Kauffman, secretary; George Bockel, son of the defendant, treasurer. Sometime in the summer of 1932, John M. Bennett, one of the plaintiff partners, a neighbor and personal friend, was approached by defendant, who informed him that he, the defendant, was likely to be involved in litigation with the Pennsylvania Electric Company and if it came to a head, he would talk to him about it later. In December, 1932, defendant came to the office of plaintiffs and went over the matter with .both partners. At this meeting it appeared that the controversy involved a coal-sales contract between the Majestic Coal Company and the Pennsylvania Electric Company. Equity proceedings were thereupon instituted by the plaintiffs on behalf of the Majestic Coal Company, which later, by agreement executed on behalf of the coal company by Bockel as vice-president and attested by Kauffman as secretary, were settled for $17,041. At the direction of Bennett, the check was made payable to the Majestic Coal Company, and was deposited at the Altoona Trust Company at Altoona, in the name of “J. E. Bockel, Special.”

With respect to the employment of the attorneys, John M. Bennett testified in part as follows: “Q. You *388 knew Mr. Bockel was the principal stockholder in the Majestic Coal Company? A. Mr. Bockel told us he was the Majestic Coal Company......Q. You knew at the time you were dealing with a corporation? A. We were dealing with the corporation formally, so far as the papers were concerned, but so far as Mr. Weimer and I were concerned, from the very inception we were dealing with J. R. Bockel. Q. Do you have any writing with Mr. Bockel whereby he agreed to become responsible for the payment of any bill you might have for services in behalf of the Majestic Coal Company? A. Yo, we deemed it unnecessary. I considered Mr. Bockel at that time to be one of the very best friends I had. Q. But the services you performed were as a matter of fact and as a matter of record services in behalf of the corporation known as the Majestic Coal Company? A. Formally we were representing on the record the Majestic Coal Company; so far as our fee was concerned we were looking to J. R. Bockel at all times......Q. At that time you had no thought but what the Majestic Coal Company would be financially able to pay your bill for services? A. Yo. Mr. Ogle, Mr. Weimer and I never thought of the Majestic Coal Company as paying our bill; we were looking to Rudy Bockel. Yo lawyer would have gone through the proceedings in this case without knowing that Rudy Bockel was the Majestic Coal Company.......Q. Was he speaking of the Majestic Coal Company or himself as an individual? A. Oh, he knew what he was speaking of and so did I. It was a personal relationship......Q. Who hired you to do the work you have testified to and to render the services you have enumerated here? A. J. R. Bockel......Q. You have said that Mr. Bockel,— that it was Mr. Bockel who arranged for the employment of you and Mr. Weimer to begin this proceeding intended to reform the contract? A. That is true. Q. But you knew it was a contract, not between Mr. Bockel, but the Majestic Coal Company and Associated *389 Gas and Electric Company? A. Ho, Mr. Ogle, I didn’t, as I told you. Q. As soon as you got into it didn’t you know it was a corporation? A. When we got into the matter he told us the Majestic Coal Company was a corporation, but he said ‘I am the Majestic Coal Company.’......Q. You prepared that in your office and you knew on that date, which was December 19, 1932, that Rudy Bockel was vice-president? A. At that time I did. When Mr. Bockel first talked to me about it and told me about the possible litigation and the fact he would have to have counsel, there was no understanding that he was an officer of the company or that it was a corporation or anything else. Mr. Bockel always talked about ‘his mine.’ Q. Because of a little loose talk like that you concluded that he was going to become responsible individually? A. Positively not, Mr. Ogle. Q. For payment of services rendered to a corporation in which he and others were stockholders? A. Positively not. Mr. Bockel employed us individually. He had employed me individually before and had asked me to send the bill to Majestic Coal Company, when Majestic Coal Company didn’t have a thing to do with it.”

On the same subject of employment, D. P. Weimer testified: “Q. How, Mr. Weimer, in any conversation, or in any engagement in these matters that you had with Mr. Bockel, did he ever state to you that you were to render the services for the Majestic Coal Company? A. He did not. Q. Who did he say the services were to be rendered for? A. He always talked about the proposition as ‘mine.’ ‘I bought this mine largely to give George a job.’ His son George was general manager and maybe some other officer, but it was ‘my mine.’ ......Q. How then, at any time that you talked to Mr. Bockel, did he ever say that you were to look for your pay for your services from the Majestic Coal Company? A. He did not. Q. You have already stated he *390 never said to you that you were to be employed by or on behalf of the Majestic Coal Company? A. He did not; in fact, I didn’t know the Majestic Coal Company was in the thing until the papers were brought into the office, which was after he and Mr. Bennett had been together on several occasions, and then they arranged to come in and talk to me......Q. You say he never said to you that you must look to the Majestic Coal Company for payment of your fee for services to be rendered? A. He did not. Q. On the other hand he never said to you that 'I personally will be responsible for this’? A. Ho, he never in so many words said that. Q. You sort of assumed because in the preliminary talk you had with Mr. Boekel he had loosely referred to it as his property, or whatever terms he used — you naturally assumed that he was the owner of it? A. You are wrong on that. If Bennett had come in to me and said the Majestic Coal Company wanted me to go into litigation for the Majestic Coal Company, I would have wanted to know something about the Majestic Coal Company, but he came in and said, 'I talked to Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
194 A. 318, 128 Pa. Super. 385, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weimer-v-bockel-pasuperct-1937.