42 Neb. 149 | Neb. | 1894
This action was begun in the county court of Douglas county by Ernest W. Whipple and Frank L. Weaver, as partners doing business in the name and style of Whipple & Weaver. After an appeal had been taken to the district court, the death of Ernest W. Whipple was suggested, and on motion it was ordered that the case proceed in the name of Frank L. Weaver, the remaining party plaintiff. In
It is unnecessary to discuss the evidence adduced in support of each party’s contention, for there was sufficient to support a verdict in favor of either party. The contest was largely directed to proof on the one hand that the commencement of the foreclosure proceedings in the federal court was suggested by the defendant in error simply to enable them to secure the taxation of attorneys’ fees, notwithstanding the fact known to said defendant in error that to enable Mead, a resident and citizen of New York, to institute such proceedings in the United States court it was necessary that he should secure an assignment from
The defendant, by way of answer, and throughout the trial, insisted that the contract looking to the taxation of attorneys’ fees in favor of the defendant in error was one contrary to public policy. No claim was made that the attorneys’ fee provision in' the mortgages foreclosed was a device for covering up the exaction of unlawful interest, as seems to have been assumed was the case in Dow v. Updike, 11 Neb., 97, in which was first questioned the right to tax attorneys’ fees. In the opinion just referred to the only other question made of tfie right to tax attorneys’ fees was because in an act passed by the legislature in 1873 that right was recognized, and it was inferred from the repeal of said act that the legislature intended to withdraw and deny this right by which the act repealed had been conferred. Since the filing of the above opinion there have been other decisions of this court based upon the inference just noted. There has also been reprobated a resort to questionable means by attorneys for the purpose of having taxed these fees, but this court has never directly nor indirectly assumed to criticise the power or motives of the federal court in taxing such costs as we have now under consideration.
In respect to the questions argued with reference to instructions given and those refused it is sufficient to say, generally, that there was such a grouping of those complained of in argument with those of which no complaint is, or properly could be, made that we cannot consider them as invited by the plaintiff in error in argument. The judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.