This is an appeal frqm the order of the 71st District Court of Gregg County, Texas, sustaining certain exceptions to appellants’ amended original petition and dismissing their cause of action.
Appellants bring forward two points, the first asserting that the trial court erred in sustaining the exceptions to their petition; and, second, the court erred in dismissing the cause.
The undisputed facts surrounding the transaction out of which this cause arose are: In October, 1941, Lucy Mae Crawford Stout sued Homer H. Stout, appellee here, in the District Court of Caddo Parish, Louisiana, for divorce and for alimony for herself and support for 'her child. Upon trial a divorce was granted Mrs. Stout and $50 per month alimony wa* awarded her and $25 per month for child support. Certain of the alimony and child support was not paid, and in April, 1946, Mrs. Stout employed appellant Eugene J. Coen, an attorney of Shreveport, Louisiana, to bring suit for her for the past due alimony and child support, orally agreeing to pay Coen 50 per cent of the amount recovered. Coen employed appellants James W. Falvey and Paul -Painter, attorneys at Longview, Texas, to assist him in the prosecution of said suit in the Gregg
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County District Court for past due alimony and child support, appellee Stout, 'haying removed to the latter county. Upon a trial of that cause judgment was rendered in favor of Mrs. Stout against appellee, Homer H. Stout, in the sum of $1,920 for unpaid alimony and child support. That case was appealed to this court where the judgment of the court below was affirmed. Stout v. Stout, Tex.Civ.App.,
Unquestionably the allegation in appellee’s petition with reference to the oral contract between appellant Coen and Mrs. Stout with respect to his fee in the alimony suit amounted to no more than a contract for a contingent fee and in no wise can be construed as an assignment of an interest in the cause of action. However, after the cause of action, with respect to the alimony, had been reduced to a judgment and became final, the rights of the attorneys, appellants here, became fixed as owners of one-half the amount of the judgment recovered. Their rights were such that the parties to said alimony suit could not reduce the judgment and secure a valid release of it without the consent of appellants, after the appellee, as here, had notice through his attorney of appellants’ claim. Appellee cites the case of Carroll v. Hunt,
In our opinion when appellants fully performed their part of the contract for a contingent' interest in the recovery, the contract then became executed and their rights attached to fifty per cent of the recovery. Until they had performed fully their part of the contract their rights would not attach because their contract was merely contingent on a recovery and was purely executory. Browne v. King,
Appellee-makes the contention that one allegation of appellants is that they were to receive fifty per cent of the amount of money “collected.” This is true, ¡but appellants also allege in another paragraph that they were to receive fifty per cent of the amount recovered.
Therefore, it is our opinion that the trial court erred in sustaining the special exceptions to appellants’ amended petition.
We think the situation is such that the case should be remanded to the lower court for a trial of the cause upon pleadings alleging their contract for fifty per cent of the amount of alimony and child support recovered.
The judgment of the trial court is reversed and the cause remanded.
