174 P. 362 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1918
The plaintiffs are attorneys at law and the action was brought to recover from defendant the value of services rendered to him by them and to recover cash advances made by them in connection with the services. The plaintiffs had judgment for nearly twenty-one thousand dollars and the defendant appeals.
The first contention of the appellant is that he was improperly denied the right of trial by jury in the action. The question presented largely concerns the provisions of subdivision 4 of section
On a day between December 22d and December 27th, both in 1915, the parties entered into a written stipulation that the action might, on the latter day, be set for trial. On that day it was by the court set for May 4, 1916, in a department of the court in which jury trials are not held ordinarily, and also on that day, December 27th, notice that the cause had been set down for May 4th in the department mentioned was served on the counsel for the appellant. At the time the cause was set for trial the appellant did not announce that he desired a jury trial thereof. Under notice dated April 28, 1916, the appellant notified the respondents that on May 1, 1916, he would move the court "for an order setting aside the assignment" of the action "to the court and without a jury and setting said action upon the trial calendar to a jury or transferring said action to a department of the court where a trial by jury may be had." The notice was accompanied by affidavits of the appellant and of the attorney who was then his sole counsel, to the effect that the appellant had always desired and intended that the action should be tried by a jury; that at about the time the answer was filed, which was before December 22, 1915, the appellant instructed his counsel to demand a jury trial; that thereupon his counsel informed him that under the law a jury could be demanded at any time before the commencement of the trial, that a jury trial could be had upon such demand, and that he, the counsel, would make the demand in proper time; that the appellant knew nothing about the law in the premises except as it was so imparted to him by his counsel; that the counsel did not know until April 27, 1916, that subdivision 4 had been added to section
Upon the making of the motion and the submission of the affidavits, the trial court entered an order denying the motion on the ground that a jury trial had been waived. In the order it was recited that the department of the court in which the action had been set down was, and had been at all times during the pendency of the action, a department designated by the court for the trial of civil actions without a jury; that there was no jury in attendance in that department; that there were at all times two or more departments of the court in which civil actions in which juries were demanded were regularly set and tried; that the assignment of causes for trial as above indicated was pursuant to rules of the court duly adopted and in effect for many years past; and that, were the motion to be granted, it would be necessary to transfer the cause to the department of the presiding judge for reassignment to a jury department in which the cause would, in the ordinary course of the business and practice of the court, be reset for trial before a jury at a date many months in the future.
The appellant's motion was made under section
The appellant insists that subdivision 4 of section
The final contention of the appellant is that the findings by which the trial court determined that the respondents were employed by the appellant and fixed the value of their services are not supported by the evidence. There was evidence of the employment, as well as of the experience and qualifications of the respondents, and the record shows, in hundreds of typewritten pages, of what the services of the respondents consisted. The nature of the services rendered was stated in questions addressed to prominent members of the Bar, and four or five of them testified that the reasonable value of the *590
respondents' labors for the appellant was in a sum much in excess of the amount found due them by the court. The record surely shows an ample basis for the findings made. The finding as to the value of the services has a sufficient support in the testimony, alone, of the members of the Bar who appeared as witnesses. (Prince v. Kennedy,
The judgment is affirmed.
Conrey, P. J., and James, J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on August 15, 1918.