Bank of Commerce v. City of Louisville

88 F. 398 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Kentucky | 1898

TAFT, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). In the case of Bank of Kentucky v. Stone, 88 Fed. 383, just decided, we have held that, by the judgment of the court of appeals and of the Jefferson circuit court in the prohibition suits, the city of Louisville was estopped to deny, as against the parties to that judgment, that they had an irrevocable contract of exemption from any greater burden of taxation than that imposed in the Hewitt act. The complainant in the case now before us was not a party to the record in either of the three prohibition suits, but it claims the benefit of the judgment therein as a privy to the parties. This privity is said to arise from an agreement between the city of Louisville, on the one part, and certain banks of Louisville, including the complainant, on the other, by which it was stipulated that the controversies between all the banks and the city should abide the event in test suits to be instituted by three banks selected to represent three classes.

Two questions are presented for our consideration: First. Was the contract described in the bill, and attached to it as an exhibit, the contract of the city of Louisville? Second. If so, did the contract bring the complainant into such relation to the prohibition judgment and the parties thereto that it may claim the benefit of the estoppel of that judgment?

First. The averment of the bill is that the contract set forth was signed by the president of the sinking fund, and by the attorney for the city, under the authority and direction of the mayor and board of sinking fund commissioners, and by the counsel who represented the banks in said litigations. The bill further recites that the agreement was made between the city of Louisville and its sinking fund commissioners and the banks and trust companies, including the complainant. Upon demurrer to the bill, these aver-ments would doubtless be sufficient to show that the contract which was made was the contract of the city of Louisville. But the case is pending also upon the motion for a preliminary injunction; and upon that motion it is proper for us to consider the answer of the city of Louisville, which, by stipulation, was permitted to be filed without the withdrawal of the demurrer. The answer contains this averment:

“This defendant denies that said alleged agreement, an alleged copy of which or the substance of which is filed with complainant’s bill, marked ‘A,’ was signed by the attorney for the city of Louisville, under the authority of the mayor, or that this defendant executed or delivered said alleged contract or agreement, or that the same was ever authorized, ratified, or approved by the general council and mayor of the city of Louisville; and said alleged agreement or contract set forth in said copy, marked ‘A,’ is not the act and deed of this defendant, and, in so far as the same purports to be an agreement or contract by or with this defendant, it was beyond the lawful power or authority of the city attorney, mayor, or any other officer of this defendant •to execute or deliver for or on behalf of this defendant; and the same was made without express authority of law, and was and is null and void, and of no binding force or effect upon this defendant; nor does the same operate *403to prevent or defeat file power and authority vested in this defendant by said act entitled ‘An act for the government of cities of the first class,’ approved July X, 1893, to levy and collect its municipal taxes from the complainant and other banks and trust companies. This defendant states that said commissioners of the sinking fund of the city of Louisville was In 1894, and long prior thereto and ever since has been, a separate and distinct corporation from this defendant, organized and existing under the laws of the state of Kentucky, with power to sue and be sued, contract and be contracted with, and to do and perform all things necessary to execute the duties required and powers given by the act incorporating the same and the amendments thereto; but neither said commissioners of the sinking fund of the city of Louisville, nor the president nor the attorney thereof, nor all of them together, had any lawful power or authority thus to bind or obligate defendant by the terms, conditions, stipulations, or covenants, or either of them, contained in said alleged agreement or contract at tlio time, in the maimer, or under the circumstances alleged in complainant’s bill or otherwise.”

Upon a motion for preliminary injunction, therefore, the issue is raised whether those who signed the contract on behalf of the city of Louisville were authorized to bind it thereto. We are of opinion that the city attorney was vested with ample authority to bind the city of Louisville to the contract mentioned in so far as it affected the complainant herein. By section 2909 of the Revised Statutes of Kentucky it is provided that:

‘‘There shall be elected by the general council, Immediately upon the assembling of the new hoard, a city attorney, whose duty it shall be to give legal advice to the mayor and members of the general council, and all other officers and boards of the city In the discharge of their official duties. If requested, he shall give his opinions in writing and they shall be preserved for reference. It shall also be his duty to prosecute and defend all suits for and against the city, and to attend to such other legal business as may be prescribed by the general council.”

The foregoing section makes this officer the retained attorney of the city in every suit brought against it. The question at issue between the banks and the city of Louisville was whether the city could collect license taxes under one of its ordinances. The banks notified the city attorney and the commissioners of the sinking fund, whose duty it was to receive the money for the benefit of the city, that they intended to resist the collection of the tax by litigation. It was the duty of the city attorney, under the statute above set forth, to take charge of the litigation thus about to be brought. It was his duty, as the attorney of the city, to save, so far as he could without prejudice to the city’s interests, cosrs which might be accumulated should suits to the number of 20 be brought and won by the banks against the city. It seems plain to us that it was within his general authority as attorney to make an arrangement with the intended litigants, by which the litigation to be brought should be reduced in volume to as few cases as possible by means of a stipulation that all the suits involving the same questions should abide the result in one suit to be brought. We think that such a stipulation was a mere step in the management of the litigation, and was entirely under the control of the attorney retained for the suits. It did not work to the prejudice of the city in the slightest. Had the suits actually been brought, a stipulation between the city attorney and the attorneys for the banks of this character would *404have been as clearly part of the ordinary management of the suits as any other arrangement for expediting their trial. No material distinction can be suggested between the power of the city attorney to make an agreement of this character with respect to intended suits and suits actually filed. The control that an attorney has by virtue of his office over the suit in which he is employed is very wide in respect to those matters that relate to the progress of the suit and the mode of reaching a conclusion, and which do not deprive the client of a full opportunity to be heard by his attorney on the issues raised in the case. Such authority inheres in the relation between an attorney and client in respect to litigation, and the authorities fully sustain this conclusion.

In Railroad Co. v. Stephens, 36 Mo. 150, the plaintiff railroad company brought several suits against different stockholders in which the questions were precisely the same. The attorneys for the respective parties entered into a written agreement stating that, as the same facts arose in all the cases, they would abide by the judgment that should be rendered in one of them, and that a like judgment •should be rendered in each of the several cases. It was contended in that case that the attorneys who made the agreement had no authority to make the agreement, and that it was void. The court sustained the agreement as within the authority of the attorney. It said:

“The arrangement in this ease is not a. ‘compromise’ according to the usual acceptation'of that term, for that generally applies to releasing a part of the debt, taking land instead of money, or changing the nature and character of the thing to be recovered. It comes nearer within the general management of the case.”

In Ohlquest v. Farwell, 71 Iowa, 231, 32 N. W. 277, a client was a party to two suits involving substantially the same question. It was held competent for his attorney to bind him by an agreement that only one of the cases should be tried, and that the judgment resulting from such trial should determine the kind of judgment to be entered in the other case. In delivering the opinion of the court, Judge Beck said:

“It is undoubtedly true that an attorney cannot consent to a judgment against his client, or waive any cause of action or defense in the case; neither can he settle or compromise it without special authority. But he is, by his general employment, authorized to do all acts necessary or incidental to the prosecution or defense which pertain to the remedy pursued. The choice of proceedings, the manner of trial, and the like, are all within the sphere of his general authority, and, as to these matters, his client is bound by his action. These rules are conceded by counsel in this case. It cannot be doubted that, under them, counsel for parties in several suits, involving the same issues, may, in the exercise of their general authority, consent to the consolidation of all for trial, or stipulate that the trial of one shall determine the others. This pertains to the remedy pursued, — to the manner of trial,— and is not an agreement for judgment or a compromise. The parties are no<t ■deprived of a trial, nor is judgment rendered by consent. The counsel simply .assent to a trial in a particular manner; that one trial shall settle the same issues in several cases. This is just what was done by the counsel for Becker in this case. The form of agreement is that judgment in his case should follow a trial in another action. This is not an agreement for a judgment, but in effect an agreement for a manner of trial.”

*405See, also, Eidam v. Finnegan, 48 Minn. 53, 50 N. W. 933; Gilmore v. Insurance Co., 67 Cal. 366, 7 Pac. 787.

In Thompson on Trials (volume 1, § 195) the author says:

“Whore several cases are pending in court, depending upon the same facts or questions of law, it is competent for the attorneys, in virtue of their general retainers, to stipulate that only one shall he tried, and that the others shall abide the result of that one.”

We think, therefore, that, in so far as the issues arising between the banks not actually engaged in the litigation and the city of Louisville were the same as in the three suits which were brought as test cases, the contract made by the city attorney was binding upon the city.

The next question is whether the contract made enables the complainant bank to claim the benefit of the estoppel of the judgments thereafter rendered. We think it does. In Patton v. Caldwell, reported in 1 Dall. 419, the action was on a policy of insurance. Counsel for plaintiff offered to read in evidence a special verdict that had been given in another action against a different underwriter. This was objected to on the ground that the verdict was given between other parties, and therefore not admissible, upon which an agreement of all the underwriters to be bound by one verdict was proven. McKean, C. J., said:

“Tlie defendant liad no opportunity of cross-examining upon the former trial; and the answer is that he, with the rest of the underwriters, had agreed to be bound by one verdict, which is certainly the only ground for offering the evidence proposed by the plaintiff’s counsel. Whether this agreement was made in person or by a broker mutually employed, it is equally binding on the parties; and, under the agreement, all the underwriters were fully entitled to interfere upon the former trial, and to cross examine the witnesses then produced. Although, therefore, we should not have allowed the special verdict to be read, without full proof of the agreement, yet, on receiving that satisfaction, we think it would be unfair to suppress it; and, for the future, we desire that all such agreements may be entered on the records of the court.”

The court then held that the verdict thus offered was not conclusive. As the latter proposition, however, is in conflict with the rule laid down by the supreme court of the United States in a recent case of Southern Pac. R. Co. v. U. S., 168 U. S. 1, 18 Sup. Ct. 18, that part of the decision cannot be regarded as authority here.

In Brown v. Sprague, 5 Denio, 545, several ejectments were pending between one claiming title and persons having only the naked possession of the lands. An agreement: was made between all the parties that the suits should be stayed and await the event of a suit between other parties in which the same questions arose. It was held that a judgment in that suit would operate as an estoppel between the parties to the agreement.

Mr. Freeman, in Ms work on Judgments, says (section 174):

“Neither the benefit of judgments, on the one side, nor the obligations, on tlie other, are limited exclusively to parties and their privies. Or, in other words, there is a numerous and important class of persons who, being neither parties upon the record, nor acquirers of interests from those parties after the commencement of the suit, are, nevertheless, bound by tlie judgment. Prominent among these are persons on whose behalf and under whose direc-*406tlon the suit is prosecuted or defended in the name of some other person. * * * The fact that an action is prosecuted in the names of nominal parties cannot divest the case of its real character, but the issues made by the real parties, and the actual interests involved, must determine what persons are precluded from again agitating the question, and who are estopped by the previous decision. Whenever one has an interest in the prosecution or defense of an action, and he, in the advancement or protection of such interest, openly takes substantial control of such prosecution or defense, the Judgment, when recovered therein, is conclusive for and against him to the same extent as if he were the nominal as well as the real party to the action. * * * Where one seeks the benefit of an estoppel by judgment on the ground that he was the real party in interest iu an action, he must show that he conducted the action or defense openly, to the knowledge of the adverse party, and for the protection of his own interests.”

These principles are sustained by the cases' cited by the learned author. See Cole v. Favorite, 69 Ill. 457; Wood v. Ensel, 63 Mo. 193; Tate’s Ex’rs v. Hunter, 3 Strob. Eq. 136-140; Palmer v. Hayes, 112 Ind. 289, 13 N. E. 882; Gill v. U. S., 7 Ct. Cl. 522, 526. See, also, Herm. Estop. § 139.

In 1 Greenl. Ev. § 523, the principle is stated as follows:

“But, to give full effect to the principle by which parties are held bound by a judgment, all persons who are represented by the parties, and claim under them or in privity with them, are equally concluded by the same proceedings. We have already seen that the term ‘privity’ denotes mutual or successive relationship to the same rights of property. The ground, therefore, upon which persons standing in this relation to the litigating party are bound by the proceedings to which he was a party, is that they are identified with them in interest; and, wherever this identity is found to exist, all are alike concluded. Hence all privies, whether in estate, in blood, or in law, are estop-ped from litigating that which is conclusive upon them with whom they are in privity. And if one covenants for the results or consequences of a suit between others, as if he covenants that a certain mortgage assigned by him shall produce a specified sum, he thereby connects himself in privity with the proceedings, and the record of the judgment in that suit will be conclusive evidence against him.”

In the case of Rapelye v. Prince, 4 Hill, 119, Mr. Justice Bronson, speaking for the supreme court of New York, said:

“When one covenants for the results or consequences of a suit between other parties, the decree or judgment in such suit is evidence against him, although he was not a party.”

In the present case there can be no doubt from an examination of the contract and the averments of the bill that the three suits which were conducted were openly conducted in the interest of all the parties to the agreement with the knowledge and by the consent of the city of Louisville, and that the counsel who appeared for the parties to the records were at the same time discharging their duties as counsel for the other banks who had made the agreement. If any one can be bound ,by a judgment to which he is not a party, it would seem that the banks here must have been so bound. Had the result gone the other way, and a judgment been rendered in favor of the city, of Louisville in the cases referred to, it cannot admit of doubt that all the banks would have been bound by the decision. As part of the consideration for the settlement of the litigation dn the manner fixed by the agreement, the banks paid to the sinking fund commissioners for the city of Louisville the substantial sum of *407§150,000. Had tlie agreement not been entered into, it is certain that the complainant would have obtained formal judgment in a prohibition suit, and would now have been in the same position as the Louisville Banking Company. Relying on the binding character of the agreement, however, judgment was not taken in the name of complainant. Equity and justice require that effect should be given to an agreement upon the faith of which $150,000 was immediately paid to the city, and a formal judgment was not taken. It is just that, inasmuch as the banks would have been bound by a diverse judgment, they shall have the benefit of a judgment which was rendered in favor of their colleagues selected to represent them in the suit. This conclusion necessarily leads to the result that the demurrer to the bill must be overruled, and the motion for a preliminary injunction allowed.

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