Willard v. Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railway Co.

162 Ill. App. 427, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 615
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 16, 1911
DocketGen. No. 15,345
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 162 Ill. App. 427 (Willard v. Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railway Co.) 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
Willard v. Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railway Co., 162 Ill. App. 427, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 615 (Ill. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Smith

delivered the opinion of the court.

George Willard, deceased, brought assumpsit against the defendant in error in the Municipal Court of Chicago and declared upon a quantum meruit for certain services rendered by him as an attorney at law in the preparation for trial and the trial of a certain lawsuit which the defendant in error brought in 1895 against the city of Chicago to recover three-quarters of the value of a large amount of property which had been destroyed in the riots of 1894 in the city of Chicago. In December, 1904, the suit, on motion of the de; fendant in error, was transferred from the Circuit Court of Cook county to the Circuit Court of Du Page county, Illinois, and trial was had in that court resulting in a verdict and judgment against the city of Chicago in favor of the defendant in error for $100,000.

The suit brought by George Willard, deceased, was tried in the court below and resulted in an instructed verdict, finding the issues for the defendant, on which a judgment was entered in the trial court.

The question involved in the case was whether the services sued for were covered by Willard’s salary as counsel or solicitor for the defendant in error, or were services for which he was entitled to extra compensation.

The record shows the following material facts. In 1904, and for many years previous, the plaintiff in error was in general practice as a lawyer in Cook county, Illinois, and was doing legal work for the defendant in error on a monthly salary. He was known as the company’s district solicitor for the district of Cook county.

In June, 1904, George Willard, deceased, was instructed by the defendant’s general counsel, J. J. Brooks, to take steps to secure a speedy trial of the defendant in error’s suit against the city of Chicago. In response to that letter Mr. Willard wrote Mr. Brooks that in view of existing conditions the defendant in error ought to take a change of venue to some other county, and, after some consideration, Mr. Willard was directed to proceed to make the necessary application for a change of venue. That application was accordingly made and resulted in the case being transferred to the Circuit Court of Du Page county, sitting at Wheaton, Illinois. Additional counsel was employed to assist Mr. Willard, at his request, and the case was tried at Wheaton, with the result above stated, Mr. Willard participating in the preparation and trial of the cause. For this service he claimed extra compensation in the trial court, and the questions there presented are by this proceeding brought before this court for review.

. The record shows that Mr. Willard had been solicitor for the Pennsylvania Company and its underlying companies, of which defendant in error is one, for upwards of twenty-five years. The defendant in error paid Mr. Willard a salary of $225 per month for his services to that company, and the Pennsylvania Company paid Mr. Willard a salary of $225 per month for services rendered that company, making a total compensation paid by the Pennsylvania Company and the Pittsburgh Company of $450 per month. In 1892 these monthly salaries were increased respectively from $225 to $262.50, or a total of $525 per month. It appears that the duties of the solicitors, of whom Mr. Willard was one, were fixed by the by-laws of these companies respectively. The by-laws of the defendant in error were introduced in evidence and are as follows:

“First. The General Counsel shall have charge under the direction of the First Vice-President of the law business of the company and shall be located at the general office of the company in Pittsburgh.
Second. He shall be aided by two Assistant Counsel and Solicitors, who shall be nominated by the General Counsel with the approval of the First Vice-President for confirmation by the Board.
Third. He shall keep himself advised of the character and progress of legal proceedings and claims by and against the company.or in which it is interested. * * *
Sixth. All bills for expenditures incident to the management of the business of the Law Department and all bills involving the payment of money in connection with litigation in which the company is interested shall be certified by the proper solicitor and sent to the General Counsel for examination and approval before being paid.
Seventh. Ho suits shall be instituted by or in the name of the company, nor shall any suit wherein the company is a party to be compromised or settled, otherwise than in pursuance of the direction of the General Counsel and subject to the approval of the President, one of the Vice-Presidents or the Board.
Eighth. The General Counsel and Solicitors may at all times be consulted by the officers of the company and by the chairman of committees appointed by the Board, on all business requiring professional advice and when written opinions are given by solicitors the original or a copy of the same shall be forwarded to the General Counsel.
Tenth. The Solicitors shall keep in their respective offices a docket in which they shall record all proceedings connected with any action in which the Company is interested, and shall also keep such other records as may be necessary to preserve a complete history of the business of the Company intrusted to their charge; which docket and other records shall be the property of the Company, and shall, at all times, be subject to the inspection and control of the General Counsel. The Solicitors shall promptly notify the General Counsel of all suits that may be brought against the Company, and report in full to him all proceedings subsequently connected therewith. They shall represent the Company in all suits, and in other proceedings wherein their professional services may be required in their respective districts, wherein the Company is a party, or its rights or interests are involved. The salaries of the Solicitors shall be fixed, from time to time, by the Board, and shall cover all services necessary or rendered to the Company, and necessary or rendered to all other companies owned or'controlled by or in which, by reason of stock ownership, this Company is interested, or whose roads may be leased to or operated by it within their respective districts, as may be, from time to time, required of them by the Board, the President, the Vice-Presidents or the General Counsel.
Eleventh. They shall, whenever requested by an officer of the Company, take immediate measures to investigate the facts and ascertain the legal position of the Company concerning any accident, claim or liability, and they shall, in such case, promptly do what may be required for the protection of the interests of the Company; but they shall conclude no contract otherwise than in consequence of the direction or subject to the approval of the President, one of the Vice-Presidents, the General Manager, or the General Counsel.
Twelfth.

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Bluebook (online)
162 Ill. App. 427, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 615, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willard-v-pittsburgh-cincinnati-chicago-st-louis-railway-co-illappct-1911.