61 P. 631 | Or. | 1900
after stating the facts, delivered the opinion of the court.
And so it has been held that an attorney employed to draw a will is not liable to a person who, through the attorney’s ignorance or negligence in the discharge of his professional duties, was deprived of the portion of the estate which the testator instructed the attorney should be given such person by the will: Buckley v. Gray, 110
It may be urged that the court substantially instructed the jury in accordance with the rule of law above indicated, in its general charge, but we cannot concur in that view. It is true, the court charged the jury in two or three instances that, to enable the plaintiff to recover, she must establish by a preponderance of the evidence that she employed the defendants to look up the title to the
The defendants also requested the court to charge the jury that: “The gist of this action is the breach of an alleged contract by the defendants, as the attorneys of plaintiff, in failing to discover certain defects in the title to real estate claimed to have been purchased by the plaintiff, which defect consisted of an outstanding judgment lien, which judgment lien the plaintiff was after-wards compelled to buy at a cost of $350; and, before plaintiff can recover in this case, she must establish, by a preponderance of the evidence, this contract of employment and the breach thereof; and, failing to do that, the fact that the defendant Eastham afterwards, in November, purchased this judgment, and compelled the plaintiff to pay him therefor the sum of $350, would not make, and cannot make, the defendants liable in this action. ' The only matter you can consider the purchase of this judgment by the defendant Eastham for is in ascertaining and determining the amount of damages the plaintiff is entitled to recover, provided she satisfies you by a preponderance of the evidence that the defendants, prior to such purchase, in June, 1898, negligently and carelessly failed to discharge their duty as attorneys under her employment of them in negotiating the sale and looking up the title to this land, if such employment ever existed.” This instruction was evidently intended to advise the jury that the plaintiff was not entitled to
For the refusal to give the instruction requested, in reference to the employment of the defendants by H. E. Currey, the judgment of the court below must be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial; and it is so ordered. Reversed.