256 P. 97 | Idaho | 1927
Plaintiff appeals from a judgment in her favor foreclosing a mortgage, and specifies as error the refusal *239 of the court to allow and include attorney's fees and costs.
The note in suit provided for a reasonable attorney's fee, and the mortgage designated $200 as a fee in case of foreclosure. The court found that the plaintiff had obligated herself to pay $200 attorney's fees, but as the note was payable at a special place, the court concluded, as a matter of law, that the plaintiff was "not entitled to recover attorney's fees or costs in this action because of her failure to present the said note for payment."
The complaint claimed as due $500, with interest on $300 thereof at ten per cent per annum from February 1, 1922, and $200 attorney's fees and costs of suit. The defendants pleaded that the note was payable at the office of H. A. Pedersen
Company, Logan, Utah, and that they had tendered there the amount due on the note, and admitted and offered judgment in the sum of $250, found due as principal, but less than the amount of interest found due. Respondents argue that the amount claimed was greatly in excess of the amount found due, and that the action was unconscionable and an effort to "coerce defendants into paying an extortionate attorney's fee." This, however, was not the ground of the court's ruling. Defendants offered no proof, and no unconscionable facts appear from the proof of the plaintiff. The note was due July 3, 1918, and defendants had made payments thereafter at the place designated for payment. In fact, the record is confused, and it is not altogether clear that the note was not in the office of Pedersen Company at maturity and for some time thereafter. Yet, nearly five years after maturity, they still owed $250 principal, and some interest. No demand was necessary to bind the defendants (C. S., sec. 5937), nor to entitle plaintiff to maintain the suit (Sabin v. Burke,
This court has held that although a mortgage may specify an amount agreed to be paid as attorney's fees upon foreclosure, yet the court is not justified in rendering judgment in excess of a reasonable amount, as to which there must be proof. (Lewis v. Sutton,
There was evidence that a reasonable attorney's fee would be $125. This was not contested by defendants. They did not even ask the witness a question on cross-examination. This amount may be taken to be a reasonable amount to be allowed. The court erred in not allowing attorney's fees and costs. The judgment will be modified, and the cause remanded to the lower court with instructions to modify the judgment heretofore entered and enter such modified judgment allowing $125 attorney's fees, and the costs of the action to be taxed. The judgment having been ordered modified, no costs of appeal will be allowed. (C. S., sec. 7210.)
Wm. E. Lee, C.J., and Givens and T. Bailey Lee, JJ., concur.