Clough & Wheat v. Hart

8 Kan. 487 | Kan. | 1871

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Yaientine, J.:

This was an action to compel the specific performance of two certain contracts, and also for various other kinds of relief not necessary now to mention. One of said contracts was made between the plaintiffs, Clough & Wheat, and the City of Leavenworth, and the other contract was made between the plaintiffs and the Cov/wty of Leavenworth. The plaintiffs make the City of Leavenworth, the County of Leavenworth, the Missouri River Railroad Company, the Leavenworth, Atchison, and Northwestern Railroad Company, and the thirty-six individual persons named in the title of the case, parties defendant; and while the plaintiffs ask relief against all the *491defendants, yet their whole case depends upon the specific enforcement of the said contracts.

The first and principal question for us to consider is whether these contracts were valid or not. The defendants raised the question: of their validity in the court below by demurring to the plaintiffs’ petition. The court below sustained the demurrer. The plaintiffs alleged in their petition that “ On the 16th of November, 1868, the county of Leavenworth aforesaid, of the one part, at and with the consent of the county attorney of said county, made and entered into a certain written contract of that date, with these plaintiffs, partners as aforesaid, of the other part, of which written contract the following is a copy, to wit:

This article of agreement, made and entered into this 16th of November, 1868, by and between Clough & "Wheat of the one part, and the county of Leavenworth of the other part, witnesseth: That whereas the county of Leavenworth has $250,000 of the capital stock of the Missouri Eiver Eailroad Comnany, and as such stockholder claims certain rights against" said Eailroad Company, and those persons who claim'to manage the same; also, against those persons who claim to have purchased that tract of land lately lmown as the £ Diminished Delaware Eeserve,’ under a treaty with the Delaware Indians, and the said county is desirous of employing said Clough & "Wheat as attorneys to render such assistance in enforcing such claims as they properly and reasonably can: Now, for that purpose, the county of Leavenworth, in the State of Kansas, hereby undertakes and promises to and with said Clough & "Wheat to pay them the sum of $2,500 — $1,250 thereof now^ — $625 thereof one year from this date, and $625 thereof two years from this date. If the litigation ends at any time within such two years then immediately all of said $2,500 then unpaid shall be due and paid immediately. And for the same consideration said county hereby undertakes and promises to and with said Clough & Wheat to pay them for such services the value of three per cent, of all the said county has or may obtain as such stockholder as aforesaid, and to assign and transfer three per cent, in amount of all the stock it has in said Company to said Clough & Wheat, when thereto requested. And the said Clough & Wheat on their part undertake and promise to and with said county to perform such services as those above mentioned for the consideration aforesaid. It is understood and agreed by and between the parties hereto, that the county of Leavenworth *492will pay one-half of all traveling expenses, including fare, and all hotel and printing bills, by said.Clough & Wheat necessarily ■or properly incurred or paid, in, about, or in consequence of attending to any of the matters aforesaid, or any suits or proceedings in relation thereto.

In testimony whereof the parties aforesaid have hereunto subscribed their names, the said Clough & Wheat in their own proper persons, and the county of Leavenworth by its agent, attested by the clerk of said county, and the seal thereof.” (Signed and attested in duplicate.)

And that the said county then had and owned $250,000 paid-up stock in and to the capital stock of the Missouri River Railroad Company. And said plaintiffs further aver that they have duly performed all the conditions of said contract on their part; and that on the 7th of December, 1868, these plaintiffs requested the county of Leavenworth aforesaid to assign and transfer three per cent, of the stock by it owned and mentioned in said contract to these plaintiffs, but said county then neglected and refused so to do. And plaintiffs further aver that the several defendants herein knew and had notice of the making of the contract aforesaid, at the times when the same were respectively made, and from thence hitherto.”

The allegations of the petition with respect to the contract made with the City of Leavenworth are almost exactly the same as those with regard to the contract made with the County, and hence it is not necessary for us to repeat them. The two contracts are in form identical. That, however, made with the city is dated October 20th, 1868. These contracts in our opinion are void; or rather they appear upon their face to be void, and there is no allegation in the petition that shows them to be otherwise than void. The county and city of Leavenworth attempt by these contracts to employ the plaintiffs to perform precisely what it is the duty, under the law, of the county and city attorneys respectively to perform. They completely ignore the law. We have examined all the authorn ties referred to by counsel for both plaintiffs and defendants, to-wit: 9 Bosw., 433, 434; 10 Bosw., 544, 545; 2 Sandf., S. C., 460; 23 Barb., 370; 33 Barb., 603; 59 E. C. L., 534; 12 Wis., 509, 512; 17 Iowa, 413; 11 Ohio St., 190. And we have also exam*493ined the following other authorities not referred to by counsel, to wit: Smith v. Mayor of Sacramento, 13 Cal., 531; Hornblower v. Duden, 35 Cal., 664; Parker v. Williamsburg, 13 How. Pr., 250; Carroll v. St. Louis, 12 Mo., 444. Scarcely one of these authorities is applicable under our statutes, and to the particular case at bar. While the language of some of the decisions would seem to cover this case, yet the precise question involved in this case was not before the courts rendering such decisions. The cases of Carroll v. St. Louis, 12 Mo., 444, and Orton v. The State, 12 Wis., 509, are as near applicable as any of them.

Before proceeding further we would say that it will be admitted that a county is a corporation, or at least a,quasi corporation, and as such can in any case employ counsel if no counsel had otherwise been provided for them by law. It will even be admitted for the purposes of this argument that in states where no county attorney is elected, but where a district attorney is elected for several counties whose principal duty is to attend to state cases (to prosecute criminal actions,) in his district, but whose duty it also is secondarily to appear and prosecute or defend for the several counties within his district, such counties are not bound to depend upon such district attorney but may employ counsel of their own to take more especial care of the interests of the county. It will also be admitted that in any case other counsel than the county attorney may appear and prosecute or defend for a county under or for the county attorney, or to assist him, looking of course to the county attorney if to any one, for compensation. It will also be admitted that a county may employ other counsel to perform such of its legal business as the law does not authorize or require the county attorney to perform; and that there may be such business, will not be denied. And it will also be admitted that a county may with the consent of the county attorney employ such assistance for the county attorney as the county attorney may actually need. It is possible that there may be other cases where a county may employ other *494counsel than the county attorney, but we now cannot conceive of any other.

. The county attorney is elected by the people of the county and for the county: Gen. Stat., 283, §135. He is the counsel for the county, and cannot be superseded or ignored by the county commissioners. His retainer and employment is from higher authority than the county commissioners. The employment of a general attorney for the county is not by the law put into the hands of the county commissioners, but is put into the hands of the people themselves. The county attorney derives his authority from as high a source as the county commissioners do theirs, and it would be about as reasonable to say that the county attorney could employ another board of Commissioners to transact the ordinary business of the county as it is to say that the county commissioners can employ another attorney to transact the ordinary legal business of the county. Both would be absurd. It is the duty of the county attorney to give legal advice to the county commissioners, and not theirs to furnish legal advice to or for him. Some of the provisions of the statutes (Gen. Stat., 284 to 285,) relating to the county attorney are as follows:

Seo. 136. It shall be the duty of the county attorney to appear in the several courts of their respective counties and pi’osecute or defend, on. behalf of the people, all suits, applications, or motions, civil or criminal, arising under the laws of this state, in which the state or their county is a party or interested.

“ Sec. 137. Each county attorney shall * * * also prosecute all civil suits before such magistrate ” (any magistrate of his county) “ in which the county is a party or interested.

“ Sec. 138. The county attorney shall without fee or reward give opinions and advice to the board of county commissioners, and other civil officers of their respective counties, when requested by such board or officers, upon all matters in which the county is interested, or relating to the duties of such board of officers, in which the state or county may have an interest.

“ Sec. 139. The county attorney of the several counties of this state shall be allowed by the board of county commissioners, as compensation for their services, a salary as follows: * * * In counties of over twenty-four thousand inhabitants not more *495than three thousand dollars. * * * * County attorneys shall be allowed ten per cent, on all moneys collected by them in favor of the state or county. * * *

“ Sec. 140. No county attorney shall receive any fee or reward from or on behalf of any prosecutor or other individual, except such as are allowed by law for services in any prosecution or business to which it shall be his official duty to attend, nor be concerned as attorney or counsel for either party, other than the state or county, in any civil action depending upon the same state of facts upon which any criminal prosecution commenced but undetermined shall depend. * * *

“Sec. 141. The county attorney may appoint a deputy who shall perform all the duties of such county attorney during his absence or sickness.

“ Sec. 142. In the absence, sickness, or disability of both the county attorney and his deputy, any court before whom it is his duty to appear may appoint an attorney to act as county attorney by order to be entered upon the minutes of' the court.”

What we have said with reference to county attorneys will also apply to city attorneys. The statutes relating to city attorneys will be found in the General Statutes p. 131, § 11, p. 145, § 71, p. 152, §110, clause 7th. The city attorney of Leavenworth City receives by law the sum of $1,800 per annum for his services for the city; and while the city council have no power at all to supersede him as they have attempted to do in this case, they cannot even make an additional allowance for assistant counsel unless concurred in by three-fourths of the members elected to the council: Gen. Stat., 152, §110, clause 7th. '

From the foregoing we think it necessarily follows, that where a written contract between a county and an individual shows upon its face that it was made by the county for the professional services of the individual as an attorney and counselor-at-law, which services are such as the law requires to be performed by the county attorney such contract isfrvma fade void. That where a written contract between a city of the first class and an individual shows upon its face that it was made by the city for the professional services of the individual as an attorney and counselor-at-law which services are such as the law *496requires to be performed by tbe city attorney, such contract is prmia facie void: And where the petition of the plaintiff sets forth such a contract as mentioned above as a foundation for a decree for the specific performance of such contract, but does not set forth any facts which would show that such contract is not void, such petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.

We suppose it will be conceded that as a rule where a contract appears to be void upon its face if there should be any facts outside of the contract which would render the contract valid such facts should be set forth in the pleading of the party claiming the contract to be valid. So in .this case, as the contracts declared upon appear to be void, it will devolve upon the plaintiffs to set forth in their petition such facts, if there be any such, as will render the contracts valid. The judgment of the court below is affirmed.

Kingman, C. J., concurring. Brewer, J., did not sit in the case..