2 La. Ann. 275 | La. | 1847
The judgment of the court was pronounced by
This is an action on a promissory note for 3P4'53 22, drawn by the defendant to the order of T. Q. Davidson, and by him endorsed in blank. The defence is that, the note was given to the plaintiff to satisfy a judgment which Berthoud held against him, the defendant; that the plaintiff, who was at the time Berthoud’s attorney at law, agreed to enter satisfaction on the judgment, which was not done, and that defendant has since paid said judgment. In this suit, Berthoud, the owner of the judgment against the defendant, in satisfaction of which the note is said to have been given, intervenes, and prays that he may have judgment, in the stead of Elam, for the amount of the note against the defendant.
The judge of the District Court considered that one-half the note belonged to the plaintiff in his own right, gave judgment to that effect, and the intervenor has appealed. The judge considered that the other half of the note belonged to the intervenor, and had been, by his agent, remitted to the defendant, who has not appealed, but appeared in this court.
It is obvious that, by claiming the note as belonging to him, Berthoud ratified its reception by his attorney, the present plaintiff. The discharge of the judgment given by Elam to the defendant, was, therefore, valid. When the act of an ■agent, done without the authority of the principal, is ratified, the ratification ■cannot be divided and applied to one part of the act and excluded from the other; it is entire or nothing.
It is equally clear that the offer of Bailey, Berthoud’s agent, for Elam’s compensation, did not relate exclusively to his professional services; nor did Elam agree to make his compensation dependent on the event of any suit, or to take any part of the property in litigation. Tho letter of Bailey was an offer on his part, and the district judge may well have considered it a safe guide for a compensation, ex esquo et hono, for a troublesome and complicated law suit, in which the ■labor and time of the plaintiff had been expended, and have allowed him the sum of 35226 61, and interest from the time of the termination of the litigation. The intervenor says this allowance is excessive. We do not understand that the fact of the services is drawn in question, and have no evidence before us of ¿he excess of the charge. On the contrary, a subsequent letter from the agent of the intervenor to the plaintiff, fortifies the justice of his claim, which we see n0 good reason to prevent him from recovering from the succession of Carruth, in the form of the present judgment, particularly as the defendant has made no plea ■or objection as to the division of the debt. We determine this case independently of the validity of any agreement which Elam is supposed to haye made for his fee, because no such agreement is proved.