64 Wash. 150 | Wash. | 1911
In January, 1907, the plaintiff and the defendant were asserting claims against one Kemp and one Schuler,
On March 16, 1907, on the motion of the defendant, the court directed the plaintiff to file a bill of particulars in the Schuler case. The order was not complied with. Neither the plaintiff in this case nor counsel for Toklas in the cases against Kemp and Schuler, was able to locate Toklas after July, 1907. On July 2, 1907, Toklas wrote the plaintiff that he would soon be in Eastern Washington. The plaintiff and Toklas’ attorney used due diligence, both by inquiry and by writing letters, to locate Toklas, but were not thereafter' able to do so. The first they knew of his whereabouts after July, 1907, was in the month of May, 1910, when they found him in Spokane. This action was- commenced in September, 1910, for the purpose of recovering from the defendant the amount which the plaintiff claims is due him from Kemp and Schuler. The complaint alleges, in addition to the facts stated, that the plaintiff’s claims against Kemp and Schuler are barred by the statute of limitations. At the close of the
The basis of his claim is that the respondent, by accepting the assignment and commencing the action, became his agent for the prosecution of the suits, and'that he is liable to the appellant for his negligence in failing tó do so. There can be no doubt that there was an implied agreement'upon the part of the respondent to use due diligence in- the prosecution of the actions. In failing to do so, he was' guilty of negligence. It' is also elementary that, when the appellant discovered that the respondent had absented himself and was not prosecuting the actions, it became his duty to minimize the damages. The principal cannot remain supine after he discovers the nonaction of his agent, and hold the latter liable for the damages which he, by the exercise of reasonable diligence, could have prevented. The appellant and the respondent had jointly employed counsel to prosecute the cases, and each of them had paid one-half the retainer and one-half the jury fees’and advance costs. The appellant, therefore, had as much right to direct the attorney as had the respondent. It was the duty of the former to cause the cases to be brought to trial, or to be dismissed so that he could prosecute his own case. His only excuse for failing to proceed with the trials is that he needed the respondent as a witness in the case. He testified that the respondent “had to corroborate a good many of my accounts and that I had to corroborate a good many of Mr. Toldas’ accounts,” and that he “was relying on the testimony of Mr. Toldas and on my own testimony in the case.” It is obvious that, if he can establish his claim against Kemp and Schuler in this action with the respondent as a hostile party, he could have proven his case in the other suits or, upon their dismissal, in suits' which he himself could have prosecuted without the aid of the respondent as a witness. Of course, there' can be no' liability upon respondent in any event, unless the appellant has a valid claim against Kemp or Schuler, one or both. Those
We think that the failure of the appellant to pursue the course indicated precludes a recovery in this action. He assigned his claims for the purpose of the suits, and could have at any time resumed control over them. In other words, he could have terminated the agency or could have directed his attorney to proceed to trial. What recourse he would have had against the respondent, if the cases had gone against him in .whole or in part, we need not determine. Moreover, the allegation that the actions were barred when this suit was commenced is not supported by the evidence. The record shows that the services were rendered and the money expended between April, 1898, and July, 1905, under a written contract, and that the cases were dismissed in March, 1909.
The judgment is affirmed.
Dunbar, C. J., Parker, and Mount, JJ., concur.