110 Mich. 431 | Mich. | 1896
Plaintiffs are the successors of the firm of Dawson, Weir & Greenheizen, barristers at Petrolia, Ontario. The defendant resides in Detroit, this State,
It appeared upon the trial that the services were rendered, or partly rendered, by the firm of Dawson, Weir & Greenheizen, but this fact was not set out in the pleadings, or any assignment of the claim stated. The court permitted an amendment of the pleadings, under objection, and proof was then offered and received of an
It is claimed that the charge for the services rendered was in accordance with the rates established by the statute of Ontario. To prove this, Mr. Weir, a barrister and solicitor of Ontario, was called, and he was shown a printed volume, which plaintiffs’ attorney claimed was the Revised Statutes of Ontario for 1887, and appeared to be printed at Toronto at the Toronto Law Printer’s. He was asked to state if that was a volume of the statutes commonly admitted and used as evidence in the courts of Ontario, and answered that it was. He also testified that sections 31 and 34, chapter 147, of that volume, had reference to solicitors’ fees. The book was then offered and received in evidence, under objection of defendant’s counsel that it was incompetent and irrelevant, and that no foundation had been laid for its introduction. The general rule is that foreign laws may be proved by a printed volume thereof, which a witness having means of information can swear is recognized as authentic, and received, by the courts in the country in which such laws are alleged to exist. 23 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, p. 294; Owen v. Boyle, 15 Me. 147 (32 Am. Dec. 143); Woodbridge v. Austin, 2 Tyler, 364 (4 Am. Dec. 740); Jones v. Maffet, 5 Serg. & R. 523. In the last case a printed copy of the Irish Statutes was offered in evidence, with the testimony of a barrister of Ireland that he had received them of the king’s printer in Ireland, and that they were good evidence there. ' The statute was received in evidence by the Pennsylvania court' to show the law of Ireland. See, also, O’Keefe v. U. S., 5 Ct. Cl. 674; Talbot v. Seeman, 1 Cranch, 1; Ennis v. Smith, 14 How. 400. In Lacon v. Higgins, 3 Starkie, 178, a printed copy of the French Code, produced by the French consul resident in London, who obtained it at a bookseller’s shop in Paris, was admitted as evidence of the laws of France
On the trial the defendant contended that he had a special agreement with the plaintiffs to conduct the suit for from $200 to $300, and that he never authorized them to expend any greater sum. The court submitted that issue fairly to the jury, and instructed them that, if they found such special agreement did not exist, the plaintiffs’ bill would be regulated by the tariff fixed by the statute. The court was not in error in the charge. The contract of employment was made in Ontario, and is governed by the law- of the place. The statute fixed the rates of charges, and each was bound by it.
Some other questions are raised. We have examined them, but, being so clearly of the opinion upon the whole case that no error was committed, we refrain from speaking upon the other points.
The judgment must be affirmed.