13 Or. 47 | Or. | 1885
Lead Opinion
This appeal is from a judgment of the Circuit Court for Multnomah County. The respondent commenced an action at law in that court against the appellants and A. W. Witherell, and alleged in his complaint, in substance, that on or about the twenty-third day of October, 1883, one Fred Kittener was the owner and lawfully possessed of about $830, in national bank bills of the national currency of the United States, of the value of $830, and that at said time the defendants in said action, by force, fraud, and violence, unlawfully took said $830 from the person of the said Kittener, and converted and disposed of the same to their own use and benefit, against the will and consent of the said Kittener, to his damage, and to the damage of the plaintiff, said respondent, in the sum of $830. That on or about the eighth day of February, 1884, the said Fred Kittener, in writing, for a good and sufficient consideration, sold, assigned, and transferred to the plaintiff the said $830, and all his right and title therein, and his right of action against the said defendants therefor. The said defendants filed an answer to the said complaint, in which they denied specifically all the allegations therein contained, and for a further and separate defense, alleged, in substance, that the defendant Sears was and had been, since and prior to the twenty-third day of October, 1883, the sheriff of said
Said defendants further alleged in said answer that said levy upon said money by the said Sears, as sheriff, under and by virtue of the said attachments and writs of execution, was the same taking of said money mentioned and complained of in said complaint. The plaintiff filed a reply to the new matter of defense set forth in said answer denying the same. The issues so formed were tried by the said circuit court and a jury duly impaneled to try the same, and the said jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, but in the following form: “ E. J. Dahms, plaintiff, v. George C. Sears, A. W. Witherell, Hodge, Davis, & Co., and Thompson,
The plaintiff, to further maintain his issues, gave in evidence the original writ of attachment issued in the action of Thompson, De Hart, & Co. against Carson & Kittener, and also the writ of attachment in the case of Hodge, Davis, & Co. against Carson & Kittener, copies of which writs are set out in the bill of exceptions. The defendants then attempted to maintain their defense by giving evidence tending to prove the circumstances under which the currency was taken from the said Kittener, and that the said jailer and Witherell acted in good faith in taking the money from him, and they showed that the amount thereof was only $721, and that thirty dollars thereof belonged to Weinhardt, which Kittener had in his possession for the purpose of delivering to Weinhardt.
“Portland, Or., October 23, 1883.
“To the sheriff of Multnomah County, George O. Sears, and Edward Dougherty, jailer, Multnomah County: Please pay to Mr. J. A. Campbell, my attorney, all the money, and checks, and the other property you took from me. Fred Kittener.”
To the introduction of which the plaintiff objected, and the court sustained the objection and allowed an exception to the ruling. The defendants offered to show that said order was presented to the drawee, but the court overruled it, and an exception was duly taken to the ruling thereon.
The court instructed the jury, in substance, that, as the evidence then stood, the plaintiff was entitled to recover, and the only question was, who he was entitled to recover from; that whether the money was taken rightfully or wrongfully from Kittener, it would not be subject to be
The appellant’s counsel insisted that it was only because the property was on the person of the debtor that prevents it being attached on any writ; that it is a right nr privilege that attaches to the person of the debtor, and not to property, and as soon as the property was separated from the person of the debtor in any legal way, •either by his own act or the act of another, the exemption ceased, and the property might be attached like any •other property. In support of that view, said counsel •cited the following list of authorities: Clossen v. Morrison, 47 N. H. 486; Lovejoy v. Lee, 35 Vt. 430; Burleson v. Milan, 56 Miss. 399; Green v. Palmer, 15 Cal. 411; State v. Dillard, 38 Am. Dec. 208; Prentiss v. Bliss, 4 Vt. 513;
In Martin v. Clark, 8 R. I. 389, the court held that champerty was an offense against the law, whether regard be had to the ancient common law, the English statutes upon the subject, or to the legislative acts of that state; and that a contract between an attorney and counselor'at law and a client, that the former should prosecute a claim at his own cost and charge, for a part of the subject in litigation, was champertous, illegal, and void. In Duke v. Harper, 66 Mo. 51, it was held that champertous contracts in that state were void, but that a contract
Many salutary principles of the law originated in feudal times, and grew out of feudal customs, and still flourish, although the subjects they were intended to regulate have been long since swept away. So with the law against champerty. Its framework is broken down and decayed, but the principle which condemned the buying of a lawsuit in order to secure its fruits will endure as long as the desire to promote good order and insure justice controls the actions of mankind. An attorney, under our system, has a right to contract for' a contingent fee, or for a percentage upon the amount recovered, but he cannot lawfully purchase a claim for the consideration that he will prosecute it in his own name for
The appellants could not prove that Kittener had assigned the claim to Campbell, as they had not pleaded it. They had a right to introduce any proof showing that Kittener never had any claim; but this proof was an avoidance; it was a concession that he had a claim, but that he subsequently disposed of it. All such matters have to be pleaded, as necessarily as a payment has to be pleaded. Nor was the order alone proof of an assignment of the claim to Campbell. Had Kittener agreed, upon a sufficient consideration, to sell the claim to Campbell, and thereupon drawn the order, it would have been proof of an assignment; but standing by itself, I hardly think it sufficient. The instructions of the court to the jury, under the view taken by the court, were mainly correct; but so much importance was attached to the fact that the money taken from Kittener was in the custody of the law, and therefore not subject to levy, that the other questions considered herein were overlooked, that the facts did not give the respondent a right of action, and that he had to establish his ownership of the claim, and the joint conversion of the money by the appellants, before the court could properly instruct that he was entitled to recover. I think a jury has a right, in cases of tort, where there are several defendants, to
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the view that the plaintiff, having alleged a joint tort, must prove a joint conversion. As to the other point, deeming it unnecessary to the decision of the case, I express no opinion.