172 P. 118 | Or. | 1918
“The plaintiff further alleges that it was compelled to and did pay out and expend in defending the said action * * (Walsh v. Montana Coal & Iron Co. et al.) in the said District Court of the State of Montana and in the Supreme Court of the State of Montana, for attorney’s fees, witnesses, printing, filing fees, notary, stenographic work and traveling expenses, the sum of $896.25, and an itemized statement of which is hereto attached and marked ‘Exhibit A’ and made a part of*530 this complaint, and which said sums and each of them this plaintiff alleges was a reasonable snm and amount for such expenses and required to be paid in the defense of said action, and that each and all of said sums were paid on or before the 14th day of March, 1917, and together with the sum of $1,746.51 paid to satisfy the said judgment and lien, amount in the aggregate to the sum of $2,642.76, no part of which has been paid by defendants to plaintiff.”
Of these items, the charges made by O. F. Goddard against the plaintiff herein for attorney’s fees in the 'Walsh case are: To conducting the first trial in the District Court $50; to preparing brief for first appeal, $50; to arguing first appeal, $100; to services rendered at the second trial in the District Court $250; to arguing second appeal, $100. The charges of Johnson & Coleman against the same party are: To attorney’s fees at the second trial in the District Court, $100; to preparing a brief for second appeal, $125. Total $775.
The deposition of Mr. Goddard, which was received in’ evidence at the trial of this action, states in effect, that he and Messrs,. Johnson & Coleman, who are attorneys at law and practice their profession at Billings, Montana, appeared for the Montana Coal & Iron Company in the suit brought against it and others by Walsh; that the 'deponent was familiar with the fees demanded by attorneys in Yellowstone County in that state; and that the same so charged by Johnson & Coleman and himself were reasonable for the services thus rendered.
The deposition of H. J. Coleman, one of the attorneys mentioned by Mr. Goddard, states that he is familiar with the costs and expenses of litigation in Montana, and that a reasonable attorney’s fee for the defense which was made for the plaintiff herein in the
“I know of my own knowledge that the Montana Coal & Iron Company, individually and by its attorneys, made every possible effort to defeat said suit; that said suit was fairly and honestly defended; and that no legitimate effort was omitted in the defense of the Walsh suit against the Montana Coal & Iron Company.”
The deposition of Harry L. Wilson states that he is an attorney and engaged in the practice of law at Billings, Montana, and in answer to questions detailing the services rendered in the defense of the Walsh case, for which charges were made, as hereinbefore stated, the deponent testified that an attorney’s fee therefor of from $750 to $1,000 would be reasonable.
The defendants herein offered no testimony tending in any manner to contradict the sworn statements thus made in relation to the reasonableness of the attorney’s fees. Based upon this evidence the jury were charged as follows:
“The Court instructs you that if you shall find in favor of the plaintiff, then your verdict should be for the amount which the plaintiff alleges it necessarily paid in satisfying the judgment and decree in the Montana suit, namely, $1,746.51, plus $896.25, expended in the defense of that suit by .the plaintiff in this action.”
An exception having been taken to the language thus employed it is contended by defendants’ counsel that an error was thereby committed. Where, as in this instance, there is no conflict in the evidence as to an issue, the court is justified in charging the jury to find as alleged in the pleadings of one of the parties: Briscoe v. Jones, 10 Or. 63; Montour v. Grand Lodge, 38 Or. 47 (62 Pac. 524). No error was committed in this respect.
“When notice is thus given, the judgment, if obtained without fraud or collusion, will be conclusive against him, whether he appeared or not. ’ ’
A verdict was rendered for the plaintiff for the amount stated in the instruction quoted, but upon ex-
Believing that the errors assigned and not considered are unimportant, and invoking Article VII, Section 3, of the Constitution, the judgment rendered herein should be affirmed, and it is so ordered.
Affirmed.