13 Colo. App. 1 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1899
Notwithstanding the failure of the mining company to take issue on the complaint and contest the plaintiff’s right to recover, it has appealed from the judgment and attacks its validity because of the inclusion therein of attorneys’ fees. The action of the court was predicated on section 18 of the mechanic’s lien act of 1893, which is as follows:
“ In all suits for the foreclosure of liens provided for in this act, in which the plaintiff shall obtain a judgment and decree of foreclosure against the property described in said lien, there shall be taxed as costs, in addition to the costs already provided for in such cases, a reasonable sum as an attorney fee to be fixed by the court at the time of rendering such judgment and decree.” Session Laws, 1893, p. 325.
In 1896 the plaintiff and some fifteen others were laborers employed by the Los Angeles Gold Mine Company. It became indebted to them for labor and materials aggregating $1,919.93. The claims were not paid and the various parties filed liens under the statute and three days afterwards brought suit to enforce them. The suit was brought in the name of Campbell in his own behalf and as assignee of all these various claimants. Process was served, the defendant company appeared and demurred and thereafter withdrew the demurrer and took leave to answer. The company failed to plead, and the plaintiff took a default for want of answer, proved up, and had judgment of foreclosure. When the default was entered it appeared that all the claims embraced in the suit had been paid except the plaintiff’s, and he only had judgment and a foreclosure decree for the sum of $146 and an attorney’s fee of $400. We are not advised as to the evi
We are quite ready to concede with the appellant that the court ought to have vacated its judgment in so far as it taxed $400 for attorneys’ fees, and if this was the only question in the case we should unhesitatingly either vacate or modify the judgment. It has been decided in this state, following the supreme court of the United States, that where the question at issue is one which respects the value of services rendered by attorneys the jury to which the matter is submitted may disregard the evidence of the witnesses, and on their own judgment and experience determine the sum which the attorneys ought to receive for their labor. This principle would seem to justify us, if there was nothing in the record otherwise to warrant it, to use our own professional judgment and experience in determining the propriety of the action of the trial court in fixing the fees of the counsel. Without hesitation we conclude the court erred in fixing the fee at the sum of $400 even though the judgment and foreclosure had been for the entire sum stated in the complaint. The fee is unreasonable, and for the collection of $2,000 or thereabouts by suit we know of no custom or practice which without a protracted and bitterly contested trial would justify an attorney to charge twenty-five per cent
There is another and a better reason, however, for denying the regularity and validity of the judgment as it stands, even conceding the constitutionality of the statute. By the very terms of the act it is provided that only in suits for the foreclosure of liens in which the plaintiff shall obtain judgment and a decree of foreclosure shall the attorneys’ fees be taxed. The statute itself, therefore, distinctly provides that the right to have attorneys’ fees taxed at all is dependent on the foreclosure, and unless the plaintiff succeeds in obtaining foreclosure he may not mulct the defendant in Ms fees as part of the costs. Under these circumstances, therefore, they should be computed on the extent of the judgment which he obtains and for which the foreclosure is ordered. In this case the foreclosure was only for the sum of $146; the balance of the claims had been paid prior to the entry of judgment. There was no foreclosure as to the balance of the sum claimed in the suit, and the judgment itself being only for the sum of $146 and for the foreclosure of Campbell’s lien alone, it is only for that particular foreclosure for which attorneys’ fees could be taxed as costs. Manifestly the charge of $400 for foreclosing a lien for $146 would not only be unreasonable, but it could under no circumstances be
Aside from all these considerations, however, we' have reached the conclusion that this statute is fundamentally bad and cannot be sustained. We put the decision on this precise ground that the parties may obtain, if they choose, the opinion of the supreme court on the question. The constitutionality of acts which permit plaintiffs in suits of various descriptions to have attorneys’ fees taxed as costs have been before many courts for consideration. They have mainly been suits against railroad companies to recover for stock killed or property destroyed by fire. In only one or two cases to which our attention has been directed have such provisions been found in statutes in the nature of lien acts. On principle we can discover no difference between the two. In either case it is an attempt to confer on a certain class of suitors extraordinary rights and privileges, and subject parties, who have incurred debts for which under the statute liens may be filed with the right of foreclosure, to a liability beyond that imposed on other debtors. We are free to confess that lien acts have been upheld in most states, and the extraordinary privileges conferred by these acts sustained on the theory that they are beneficent in their purpose, praiseworthy in the ends which they seek to accomplish, and designed to protect a class of people, to wit, laborers, in the collection of their wages. The statutes have been largely extended by the efforts of other people until now not only are laborers protected by these enactments, but material men, contractors and others, who were never, according to the original design and purpose of these statutes, intended to be embraced within their scope and purpose. It may be very gravely questioned whether the decisions upholding the statutes with reference to these other parties can on principle be sustained, for there is no reason apparent to the average intelligence which ought to give a man who undertakes to build a house any other or greater rights in the collection of his debt and the enforcement of his claim than to any other
These are the only decisions to which our attention has been directed, or which in a hasty examination of the question we have been able to find for ourselves. The appellee failed to file his brief within time, though he tendered one
Reversed.