87 Kan. 376 | Kan. | 1912
Thé opinion of the court was delivered by
The Lanyon Zinc Company, owning smelters at Iola and La Harpe, smelted imported lead and zinc ore for itself and others. Ultimately it confined its operations to treating ores for the American Metal Company on a toll basis. Shipments of these ores were consigned to the zinc company, which maintained a bonded warehouse at its plant. The ores were inspected there and then released. Assays were then made, the amount of the duty determined, and the zinc company notified. It immediately paid the duty, and drew a sight draft on the metal company for the amount.
“We hereby employ F. B. Vandegrift & Co. to recover and collect any excessive custom duties, penalties and charges heretofore or hereafter, charged to or paid by us, or for our account, on all importations of zinc ores, etc., by us or for our account, and agree to pay said F. B. Vandegrift •& Co., fifty per cent of such recoveries. We are not to be liable for any expenses or charges incurred by F. B. Vandegrift & Co., in the premises, and F. B. Vandegrift & Co. are not to be liable for failure to file protests, except where they receive actual notice of liquidation of an entry in reasonable time to file the protest thereon, and are not to be liable otherwise except for failure to exercise reasonable care and diligence in the premises.”
Under this contract the plaintiffs secured the return to the zinc company of large sums of excessive duties. The services performed were of a special and peculiar character, requiring a technical knowledge of chemistry, metallurgy and assaying, an intimate knowledge of the classification of articles of import, and technical knowledge and experience in the procedure necessary under the revenue laws and department regulations to procure refunds of this character. The plaintiffs attended inspections, prepared and filed proper protests, conducted contests, and prepared and conducted cases before the board of general appraisers at New York. They employed attorneys who finally succeeded in arranging a test case, involving the principal matters of dispute between the government and the zinc company, which was decided in favor of the zinc company by a federal court in Teyas. After that the plaintiffs followed up protests by showing to the board of general appraisers that the duties protested were governed by
In April, 1909, defendant Rogers was appointed receiver of the zinc company. A government warrant was issued in favor of the zinc company for the sum of $22,533.18, protested duties refunded through the efforts of the plaintiffs. This warrant was received by Rogers, and was immediately indorsed and delivered by him to the American Metal Company. The plaintiffs sued the zinc company and the receiver for their share, one-half, of this sum and recovered. As a part of the judgment the receiver was ordered to pay into court for the use of the plaintiffs out of the amount of the warrant the sum of $11,266.69 and the costs of the suit. The receiver and the zinc company appeal.
It is argued that the contract is champertous. Champerty involves the prosecution or maintenance by one party at his own expense of the suit of another for a share of the anticipated judgment. (A. T. & S. F. Rld. Co. v. Johnson, 29 Kan. 218, 227.) It is not essential that an action be pending when the contract is made but litigation must be contemplated. (6 Cyc. 852.) Champerty as thus defined by the common law is fully recognized in this state. (Moreland v. Devenney, 72 Kan. 471, 83 Pac. 1097, and cases cited in the opinion.) The doctrine, however, has not been extended; and in view of the fact that the reasons by which it was formerly supported have lost much of their force through the progress of society it ought not to be extended. Agreements to pay contingent fees for services rendered in securing by moral methods the allowance of claims of a legitimate character by the executive departments^ of the government or commissioners appointed to examine claims have never been regarded as champertous, and this is true even where the contingent fee also covers expenses incurred in the prosecution of the claim. (Manning v. Sprague, 148 Mass. 18, 18 N. E. 673, 12 Am. St. Rep. 508, 1 L. R. A. 516.)
“Neither the definition of champerty nor the reasons why it was held to be an offence have any proper application to a proceeding such as that by which the defendant, under his contract with the plaintiff, sought to enforce his claim. against the government of the United States. There was no suit to be brought, nor any defendant in the proposed proceeding in thé same sense that there is in a contested cause at law or in equity. . . . The proceeding before this tribunal was an inquest, as distinguished from a trial or a lawsuit.” (pp. 20, 21.)
Likewise in this case the business fell entirely outside the ordinary course of legal procedure. The test case by which the proper application of the revenue laws to the importations in question was finally settled was a mere incident growing out of the plaintiff’s eim ployment, an expedient adopted by them and not a substantive part of the contract which the parties had in contemplation when it was made.
It is argued that the contract was unconscionable. The case of Taylor v. Bemiss, 110 U. S. 42, involved a contingent fee for the prosecution of a claim before the Southern Claims Commission. The court said:
“It was decided in the case Stanton v. Embrey, 93 U. S. 548, that contracts by attorneys for compensation in prosecuting claims against the United States were not void because the amount of it was made contingent upon success, or upon the sum recovered. And the well-known difficulties and delays in obtaining payment of just claims which are not within the ordinary course of procedure of the auditing officers of the government, .justifies a liberal compensation in successful cases, where none is to be received in case of failure. Any other rule would work much hardship in cases of creditors of small means residing far from the seat of gov*380 ernment, who can give neither money nor personal attention to securing their rights. . . . While fifty per cent seems to be more than a fair proportion in the division between client and attorney in an ordinary case, we are not prepared to assume that it is extortionate for that reason alone, and the testimony of the lawyers on that subject, taken as experts, does not justify such a conclusion.” (pp. 45, 46.)
In the present instance the services performed were not in any sense those of an attorney in an ordinary case, and the evidence shows the compensation agreed upon was that which was generally recognized as proper. There is no suggestion that fraud was practiced or any undue advantage taken.
The defendants seem to think -they should not be liable because the ore in fact belonged to the metal company and because that company ultimately paid the duty which was refunded. Under the revenue law the zinc company was deemed and held to be the owner of the property. (26 U. S. Stat. at L., p. 131.) Neither the government nor the plaintiffs knew the metal company, and it is not material to this controversy what the arrangements were between that company and the zinc company. The plaintiffs executed their contract with the zinc company and are entitled to their compensation.
It is claimed that the court erred in ordering the judgment paid out of the warrant which the receiver-received. The metal company having entrusted the collection of excess duties on its ores to the zinc company, the zinc company had a legitimate claim on the fund for the expenses incurred and it was the duty of' the receiver to account to the court for the warrant and obtain an order for the disposition of the money in the regular way. He could not arbitrarily divest himself of the fund. It should be regarded as still in his possession, and the plaintiffs were entitled in equity to a lien upon it for their share.
Some complaint is made by both parties respecting-
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.