White v. Mitchell

1954 OK 177, 279 P.2d 950, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 749
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 1, 1954
Docket35757
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1954 OK 177 (White v. Mitchell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. Mitchell, 1954 OK 177, 279 P.2d 950, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 749 (Okla. 1954).

Opinion

ARNOLD., Justice.

Corinne B. Mitchell as administratrix of the estate of Joseph D. Mitchell, deceased, brought this action in the District Court of Osage County against H. P. White on five promissory notes the principal sums of which totalled $576 with accrued interest and attorney fees as provided in the notes.

The pleadings are very voluminous and complicated. It would result only in confusion to attempt to detail them here. The essential facts as shown by verified pleadings and supported by the evidence are:

H. P. White had represented Joseph D. Mitchell as attorney in various matters of litigation since 1933. Separate written contracts of employment we're entered into by the parties on two of the cases; on one of the cases the contract of employment was apparently oral; and on two of the matters it does not appear whether the contract of employment was written or oral.

White had borrowed at different times small sums of money from Mitchell, giving his promissory notes therefor, payable on demand, which ate the notes sued on here. The first note is dated March 3, 1943, in the sum of $100; the second note is dated July 24, 1943, in the principal sum of $150; the third is dated November 15, 1943, in the sum of $100; 'the fourth is dated May 8, 1944, in the sum of $76; and the fifth dated February 7, 1943, is in the principal sum of $100; all the notes bore ten per cent interest from date and provided for an attorney’s fee if placed in the hands of an attorney for collection. No payments had been made on any of the notes either of principal or interest.

Prior to Mitchell’s death, on June 21, 1947, White rendered Mitchell an itemized statement of all the legal fees which White claimed Mitchell owed him. No action was taken by Mitchell on this statement.

On March 1, 1948, Mitchell brought suit against White on the first of the above-described notes in Justice of the Peace Court. Trial of the case was never had but after the death of plaintiff Mitchell the case was dismissed without prejudice.

After the death of Mitchell White filed with the administratrix of his estate three separate claims for various items of legal services rendered the deceased in which he gave credit for the notes sued on here with accrued interest. The administratrix took no action upon these claims for ten days, whereupon White filed three separate lawsuits against the administratrix in the District Court of Osage County on the various items involved. For the sake of clarity these three suits, the items involved, and the disposition thereof are described immediately below:

"(1) Cause No. 18,748 involved a claim for legal services rendered under a written contract of employment in the case of Mitchell v. Concho Sand and Gravel Company for royalties due Mitchell under a written rock mining lease. White obtained judgment for Mitchell for the royalties due him together with a judgment for an attorney’s fee of $1,700; the judgment was later set aside, Mitchell and Concho compromised the suit without aid of attorneys, and in the written agreement of compromise Mitchell assumed liability for White’s attorney fee.

In said Cause No'. 18,746 the administra-trix did not plead the notes here sued on as off-set but introduced them in evidence and at the close of the trial withdrew them with permission of the court. Judgment was rendered in favor of White for the sum of $1,400 and this judgment was paid by the administratrix.

*952 (2) Cause No. 18,747 was based upon legal services rendered under an oral contract of employment in June, 1944, by White for Mitchell in appearing before Osage Indian Agency officials, a senate subcommittee, the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, and the Secretary of the Interior in an attempt to uphold the validity of Mitchell’s limestone mining lease (it appears Mitchell had obtained this lease from the Osage Indian Agency and had subleased it to Concho Sand and Gravel Company; after Mitchell brought suit against Concho for royalties accrued under the sub-lease the Secretary of the Interior notified Mitchell that his lease was void and made demand for a royalty of ten per cent of all limestone theretofore mined in lieu of the flat yearly rental provided by the lease. Through White’s efforts the Department of Interior reversed its stand and acknowledged the validity of the lease and accepted the flat yearly rental provided thereunder, thereby effecting a saving to Mitchell of some $20,000). A demurrer to the petition was sustained in District Court and White appealed to this court. We held that the petition showed on its face that the services were rendered in 1944 under an oral contract of employment, that the case was filed in 1948, that the statute of limitation had run and affirmed the lower court in sustaining the demurrer. White v. Mitchell, 206 Okl. 151, 241 P.2d 407.

(3) Cause No. 18786 was based on an alleged account stated (being the detailed statement for legal services rendered to Mitchell before his death, mentioned above, which included the two items sued on in the cases listed in paragraphs (1) and (2) above as well as other items). In the petition in this case White gave credit for the notes herein sued on with accrued interest. This case was dismissed without prejudice on June 21,1949.

Plaintiff as administratrix of Mitchell’s suit filed the instant suit against White on July 1, 1949. Her amended petition sets up five causes of action, one on each of the notes above described, and further alleges as to all five causes of action that White, before the notes became barred by limitation, on June 26, 1948, acknowledged said indebtedness in writing by including the notes on the written verified claim which he filed with the administratrix as a credit against the amount which he claimed the estate owed him and in addition wrote a letter to the administratrix in which he stated he was giving credit for the amount of the notes against the sum which he claimed was due him; and also that in Cause No. 18,747 (described in paragraph No. 2 above) he had listed the notes as a dredit, and attached the creditor’s claim filed by White as an exhibit to the petition.

Defendant’s answer consisted of a general denial, plead the statute of limitation to tire first four notes, alleged that because the notes had been introduced in evidence in the case described in paragraph No. 1 above that they had been adjudicated as an offset to White’s claim for services in that case; and in his cross petition replead his petition in case No. 18,786 (described in paragraph No. 3) ; acknowledged receipt of the amount of the judgment, $1,400, rendered in the case described in paragraph No. 1 above, and prayed judgment against plaintiff-in the amount of $5,170.92 with interest.

Plaintiff in her reply and answer to defendant’s cross petition denied that the notés were barred by the statute of limitation because of defendant’s acknowledgement of the indebtedness represented by the notes by giving credit1 therefor in his claim filed in the estate and in his pleadings in the cases described in paragraphs Nos. 1 and 2 above; that the items set out in his cross petition were sued on and settled in said cases and are now res adjudicata; that his claim is barred by the statute of limitation.

On the issues thus made up the cause went to trial to the court.

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1954 OK 177, 279 P.2d 950, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 749, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-mitchell-okla-1954.