19 Wash. 65 | Wash. | 1898
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Plaintiff brought this action upon an assigned claim to recover for services performed by one Wheeler as an attorney at law for the Commercial National Bank of Seattle. On November 22, 1894, said bank, desiring to retire from business, entered into an arrangement with the Seattle National Bank, the defendant here, whereby it transferred all its assets to this defendant as security for moneys advanced by it to pay the indebtedness of the Commercial National Bank as shown by its books, amounting to $68,576.44. It is not claimed that the books of the Commercial National Bank showed it to be indebted to the plaintiff for the services aforesaid. It was further provided in the agreement of transfer that said assets should secure to the Seattle National Bank interest at the rate of eight per cent, per annum on said amount, and should also secure all sums that it might be called upon to pay for the Commercial National Bank; and, in case of an overplus, it was to be paid pro rata to the stockholders of the Commercial National Bank. The claim aforesaid was based upon services alleged to have been performed for the Commercial National Bank in a number of different actions, and it was contended by the plaintiff that after the transfer of its assets to the defendant here he continued to perform services in such actions for some months thereafter. The assets so transferred to this defendant included a note for $1,130, with interest, given by said Wheeler to the Commercial National Bank, and also a claim for an overdraft of $813.34. Upon Wheeler’s being asked to pay
Thereafter the Seattle ISTational Bank re-assigned said claims to the Commercial ISTational Bank for the purpose of bringing suit. The proceeds in case of a recovery, however, were to go to the Seattle ISTational Bank as a part of the assets aforesaid, and for the purposes of the transfer.
In said action Wheeler set up his claim for services as an off-set or counter-claim. The reply contained a denial of the rendition of any such services or of any indebtedness therefor, so that the fact as to whether he had any claim for such services, or had performed the same, was directly in issue in said trial. Thereafter, during the pendency of said action, Wheeler assigned his claim to the plaintiff here, but the same was not withdrawn from the action aforesaid, and in its findings, the cause having been tried without a jury, the court found,
“ That the plaintiff was not the first day of November, or at any other time, indebted to the defendant for services as an attorney rendered within three years last past and for money paid to and for the use and benefit of the plaintiff in the sum of $2,400, or in any other sum or any sum at all, and that the defendant L. H. Wheeler is not entitled to recover anything from the plaintiff upon the cause of action set up in the first cross-complaint contained in his third amended answer herein;”
and x*exxdered judgment thereon as follows:
“ That the defendant L. H. Wheeler take nothing by either of the causes of action set up in the cross-complaint in his third amended answer, and that the same and all matters contained in said cross-complaint be and are hereby adjudged and determined, and that the plaintiff recover its costs and disbxxrsements herein and be entitled to- execution.”
In this action the defendant sought to off-set the demands originally held by the Commercial National Bank against Wheeler upon the note and overdraft, and the court charged that by pleading this off-set the defendant admitted its liability to the plaintiff upon the claim for the services performed by Wheeler, an'd the respondent’s counsel maintains that this was correct upon the theory that to dispute the aforesaid claim and at the same time plead an off-set would be setting up inconsistent defenses, and cites the cases of Seattle National Bank v. Carter, 13 Wash. 281 (43 Pac. 331) and Allen v. Olympia Light & Power Co., 13 Wash. 307 (43 Pac. 55), but these cases do not sustain his contention. We are of the opinion that a defendant may deny liability, and at the same time set up a counterclaim or off-set, or allege payment, in all cases where there is no direct contradiction in the special facts pleaded, and there is none such here. Corbitt v. Harrington, 14 Wash. 197 (44 Pac. 132).
A further question remains to be considered, and that is the contention of the plaintiff that he had a right to recover upon an account stated on the ground that he had delivered a statement of his account to the defendant in this action, and that the same had been retained a long time without objection. The facts as to this are disputed, but, adopting the most favorable construction for the plaintiff, it is well settled that such an account only determines the amount of a debt where a liability exists, and there was no direct obligation here against the defendant. Bradley Fertilizer Co. v. South Pub. Co., 17 N. Y. Supp. 587; Austin v. Wilson, 11 N. Y. Supp. 565. A great many questions
Reversed and remanded accordingly.
Ahders, Dunbar, Gordon and Reavis, JJ., concur.