4 S.W.2d 296 | Tex. App. | 1928
This suit was brought by the plaintiffs in error, Ben H. Kelly, H. Sim Kelly, and W. S. Ethridge, against Joe Gross and Sue Gross. General and special exceptions to the petition were sustained. The plaintiffs declining to amend, their suit was dismissed.
The petition is wanting in proper certainty and clearness, but such defects cannot be reached by general demurrer. These are but defects of form and do not deprive the plaintiffs in error of the right of reversal if the general demurrer was improperly sustained.
The material facts alleged in the amended original petition may be summarized as follows:
The defendants are husband and wife. April 14, 1926, Sue Gross was the defendant in cause No. 2097, in which Joe Gross and another had sued her as a feme sole, under the name of Sue Johnson, to recover certain *297 land and remove cloud from title, it being asserted in said suit that said land was Joe Gross' separate property and Sue Johnson's claim thereto as his former wife clouded his title. Mrs. Gross employed the plaintiff Ben H. Kelly to represent her in such suit, defend the same for her and file cross-action for protection of her community property rights. Under the name of Sue Johnson she, in writing, employed said Kelly and assigned to him a one-half interest in what might be recovered as her share of the community property accumulated during the period from the marriage of the Grosses in 1916 to their divorce in 1924, which contract was attached to and made a part of the petition. Thereafter said Kelly, with the consent of Mrs. Gross, associated his coplaintiffs with him as her counsel. Thereafter Mrs. Gross and plaintiffs verbally agreed that the contract of employment should include and apply to any litigation then pending and thereafter instituted to recover or secure the property rights to which she was entitled up to the date of a legal divorce. The services rendered by the attorneys are then stated, and "that such actions and services included the new causes Nos. 3001 and 3012, both being divorce cases filed by the said Joe Gross against the said Sue Gross, and the last cause including the efforts to recover the same property sued for in said original cause No. 2097." The plaintiffs would have recovered judgment in favor of Sue Gross against Joe Gross for at least $13,804.50, which would have been collectable. Thereafter plaintiffs were discharged by the defendants, who had settled their differences and arranged to dismiss their actions and cross-action against each other and made some pretended reconciliation, and then or soon thereafter resumed the marital relations, rendering it impossible for plaintiffs to continue their services and complete their contract with Sue Gross, to their damage in the sum of $6,902.25, being one-fourth of the total community property of Joe and Sue Gross. Defendants are both solvent, having large and valuable holdings in their respective separate rights in addition to the community estate. The foregoing facts were alleged as the basis for the recovery against both defendants of said sum of $6,902.25, as damages for breach of the contract of employment.
The petition also set up that the reasonable value of the services rendered Sue Gross was $3,000, for which recovery in the alternative was sought against both defendants.
It is not directly so alleged in the amended original petition, but the inference is that at the time Joe Gross filed suit No. 2097 and Mrs. Gross employed Ben H. Kelly to represent her, Mr. and Mrs. Gross acted upon the mistaken belief and assumption that they had been previously legally divorced. That such was the belief and assumption of the parties is also shown by the affirmative allegations of the defendants' answer and by the allegations of the supplemental petition, all of which may be considered in aid of the amended original petition. Pope v. Railway,
The marital relation is one in which society and the state are vitally interested. The public policy relating thereto is to foster and protect it, prevent separation and divorce, and encourage the parties to live together. Public policy strongly favors reconciliation of the parties, abandonment of divorce proceedings, and resumption of the marriage relation. 9 R.C.L. title "Divorce and Separation," §§ 11 and 19. Contracts between parties to a divorce proceeding and his or her attorney have frequently been held to be promotive of divorce and declared to be illegal. Contracts whereby the attorney's fee is made dependent on the granting of the divorce, or measured by or payable out of the alimony recovered, have been so condemned. 9 R.C.L. title "Divorce and Separation," §§ 13 and 17.
The rule is recognized in this state that the husband may maintain an action against his wife to establish his property rights. McCartney v. McCartney,
We thus have a situation where the wife is sued by her husband and another for land and chattels in which she has a community interest, and is later again sued by her husband for divorce and settlement of property rights, the wife being represented by counsel whose fee is contingent upon and to be measured by the amount of her recovery in the settlement in the suits of the property rights of the parties. We have no doubt of the right of a wife thus sued to employ counsel and personally bind herself for the payment of a fee as a necessary for the protection of her marital relation and property rights. Speers Marital Rights, §§ 147-169; Cordray v. Galveston (Tex.Civ.App.)
It is not necessary for us to consider the validity of this contract if the litigation between Mr. and Mrs. Gross had proceeded to final judgment and she had refused to account to her counsel for one-half of the amount allotted to her in the settlement of the property rights. It did not so proceed, but she and her husband became reconciled and reassumed the marital relation.
In view of the interest of society and public policy of the state as outlined above, we are of the opinion that parties to a divorce proceeding, represented by counsel whose fee is contingent upon and to be measured by the final adjustment of the property rights of the litigants, owe no duty to such counsel to carry the litigation to final judgment for the benefit of such counsel. All such contracts of employment, if conceded to be valid, are subject to the duty and implied right of the litigants to reconcile their differences and reassume the marital relation; and if they do so, they are not liable in damages for breach of the contract of employment with the attorney.
This view is in accord with and supported by the opinion of Justice Smith in Kelly v. Gross (Tex.Civ.App.)
"This conclusion brings us to appellants' contention that, notwithstanding the reconciliation of the parties and their motions to dismiss, appellants had a right under their contract with Mrs. Gross to prosecute the suit to a conclusion, and enforce their assignment of one-half of whatever recovery Mrs. Gross might have obtained upon a trial of the suit. We overrule this contention. No court has the power to decree a divorce except upon the insistence of one of the parties to the union, nor except upon an affirmative showing that such party does not desire to, and cannot, and will not, resume or continue the marital relation. No other party has any right, nor can he acquire the right, to inject himself, or his claim upon either of the parties, into the divorce action, which is purely personal to those parties. It naturally follows that, when those parties compose their differences, effect a reconciliation, and move for a dismissal of the action, the court before whom it is pending has no other alternative than to grant the motion and dismiss, without the least regard to any pecuniary interest third parties may have acquired as contingent upon the granting of a divorce. This is true as a matter of public policy, which cannot contemplate any rule which would permit outsiders to speculate upon the contingency of a disrupted marital union.
"We hold that, in the face of the reconciliation between the parties and their prayer for dismissal, the trial court had no power, in this divorce suit, to enforce appellants' contract with Mrs. Gross for a contingent interest in the property which might have been recovered by her in the event of a divorce; that appellants acquired no right to intervene in, and prosecute, the suit against the wishes of the parties thereto, and that the trial court did not err in granting the injunction restraining appellants from further proceeding in the matter."
But it does not follow that such counsel are entitled to no compensation for the services which they actually rendered. On the contrary, they are entitled to recover the reasonable value thereof. Hearne v. Garrett,
The petition herein sought an alternative recovery upon quantum meruit, and in this respect stated a cause of action against both of the defendants. The court therefore erred in sustaining the general demurrer to the petition.
Reversed and remanded.