Willard v. Williams

10 Colo. App. 140
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 15, 1897
DocketNo. 1224
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 Colo. App. 140 (Willard v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Willard v. Williams, 10 Colo. App. 140 (Colo. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Bissell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was brought against the appellant, Willard, to recover the value of services performed partly by the appellee Williams, and partly by H. J. Hersey as attorney for Willard in sundry and divers suits. The whole case is in a nut shell. Hersey and Willard had a good many dealings which included the organization of the Denver, Lakewood & Golden Railway Company, and the Bennett Electric Placer Mining Company. In the furtherance of their common interests in the organization of those two corporations there seems to have been an arrangement between them by which Hersey was to receive a considerable stock interest in each company for his services, and later he was employed as the attorney for the railroad company, and the secretary of the placer company, on a compensation which is not involved and need not be stated. Willard became the holder of a large number of bonds of the railroad company on which the company defaulted in the payment of interest. Willard as the holder of the unpaid interest coupons, employed Hersey to bring suit to enforce the collection. Under this employment Hersey brought several suits before a justice, in one of them collected some money, and in another he seized money on garnishment, but the'railroad company brought suit to enjoin further proceedings in that matter, procured an in[142]*142junction and the case was taken to this court where it was ultimately heard and decided. There was no dispute respecting Hersey’s employment to carry on the litigation and practically none respecting what he did and its value. There was no evidence respecting the extent and character of the service or respecting its value, save what was given in behalf of the plaintiff, for the defense was rested on the contention that Willard was not liable for the fees because Hersey had agreed to do the work for the compensation coming to him in the stock interest and in the salaries which he received after the organization of the railroad and the placer companies. The case was first tried before a justice where the plaintiff had judgment, and on appeal to the county court it was tried de novo before a jury, which found against the appellant. We are therefore at liberty to accept the verdict as conclusive on all matters of fact. We therefore assume for the purposes of this decision that Hersey was employed to do the work, that its value was the amount found by the jury, and that Willard’s contention that he was to do it for the benefits he derived from the organization of the two companies was totally unfounded.

With this premise the disposition of the appeal is simple. There are quite a number of errors urged respecting the rulings of the court in the admission and rejection of testimony but we are unable to discover any which form a substantial basis for a reversal. The appellant attempted to put a question to Hersey respecting the number of cases involving injunctive relief which he had had in the court of appeals, but the question was objected to and he was not permitted to put it to the witness. We discover no error in this ruling, nor can we see that the rule of law invoked against it, is at all applicable, or decisive. We are not disposed to disagree Avith counsel respecting the right to show the extent and character of the services and experience of an attorney and his status in the profession when he sues for fees and that these matters may to a greater or less extent be considered in. determinating what he ought to charge for a given service. [143]*143The question which was put can hardly he said to hear on this inquiry. It may easily be true that a lawyer may have had very extended and large experience in litigations of the gravest character and yet never had a suit of that particular description in that particular court. If counsel had pursued their inquiry and put other questions tending in the same direction whereby he had sought to elicit facts which would exhibit the limits of counsel’s experience, and he had not been permitted to pursue it a different question would have been presented. We do not think however that the rejection of this particular query, there being no attempt to follow up the examination, constitutes reversible error. The letter written by Hersey and marked “ Exhibit No. 3 ” was admitted in evidence and appears in the record so that the error assigned on the ruling of the court respecting it is unavailable. There are one or two other assignments of error based on the rulings of the court respecting the admission of testimony, but we are unable to see that the testimony which was exclnded was so entirely relevant as to make it error to reject it. Of course this conclusion is very much controlled by the consideration that the only defense was an alleged agreement to do the work for nothing and the evidence did not even tend to substantiate the making of any such contract.

All the other errors assigned are based on the instructions which the court gave and which he refused to give. It was not error for the court to refuse to give the instructions which the defendant asked because as to the first, the modification was absolutely indispensable to a correct statement of the law, and in respect to the second, it was substantially given in the charge of the court.

We should have very considerable difficulty to support the court’s instruction in its fifth paragraph if the defendant had preserved the question in such way that it was properly presented and we were bound to rule on it. The charge was by consent of parties oral, and while it seems to have been paragraphed and numbered the defendant made no objection to the charge except that upon its conclusion he excepted to [144]*144the instructions contained in certain numbered paragraphs. As we understand the rule announced by the supreme court this is not an objection which is available on an appeal. We understand very well the practice which prevails hi nisi prius courts, and we know that when an oral charge is concluded, the defendant says he excepts to it and when the bill is made up it says an exception was saved to certain numbered paragraphs- As we read the rule laid down by the supreme court, a general exception of this sort is not enough to preserve the question and reverse the case because of errors which the court may have committed in such a charge. That learned court has said in two or three cases that some specific objection must be made to the part of the charge of which the parties complain in order to give the trial court an opportunity to correct the error complained of Keith v. Wells, 14 Colo. 321; Edwards v. Smith, 16 Colo. 529.

The language used makes it tolerably plain because in both those cases the court declines to consider exceptions in the absence of specific objections pointing out the part complained of whereby an opportunity was given to the trial court to correct its instructions. Obviously if the intent and scope of the requirement is to afford the trial court an opportunity to correct its charge, its attention must be called to that part of it to which the appellant objected at the time of the trial. We are unable to discover anything in the record to show that the appellant did eoniplain of any part or portion of the charge at the trial. He referred to no specific portion of it, made no objection to any part of it, but simply so far as we can see, said, I except to the charge.” Under this rule that is not enough to save the question. This is clearly right and just to litigants.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Colo. App. 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willard-v-williams-coloctapp-1897.