129 P. 330 | Mont. | 1913
delivered the opinion of the court.
Plaintiff brought this action on April 8," 1908, to recover a judgment for services as an attorney and counselor at law, rendered to the defendant in an action in the United States district court, at Helena, Montana, in which the defendant was plaintiff .and the Northern Pacific Railway Company and others were
“The said G. W. Myers agrees to use due diligence in prosecuting said suit to a final determination in said court or by compromise settlement out of court; and it is agreed and understood by both parties hereto that the said G. W. Myers is to be paid for such legal services by said Henry Bender the sum of $150 cash, and is to be further paid by the said Henry Bender twelve and one-half per cent of all the land and money recovered either by suit or by compromise in said ease, this contract includes all of plaintiff’s claims known as D. S. No. 3621, comprising the west one-half of the southwest one-fourth, and the southeast one-fourth of the southwest one-fourth, and lot Four of Section 27 in Township 8 North of Range 47 East, containing 133 and 36-100 acres, intending hereby that said G. W. Myers is to be paid for such legal services the said sum of $150, and twelve and one-half per cent of the value of all the land and money so recovered either by suit, compromise or arbitration or otherwise in any manner whatsoever; and should land other than the above described be obtained or recovered by said suit,*504 compromise or arbitration, then the said Gr. W. Myers is to further receive for such legal services twelve and one-half per cent of the value of all such land so obtained or recovered and it is understood and agreed by both parties hereto that the valuation to be placed upon any part of the claim known as D. S. No. 3621 that may be recovered is not to be less than $75.00 per acre, and further the said Henry Bender agrees to pay all expenses connected with said suit. It is further agreed to and understood that the said $150 is to be paid before the termination of said ease and if not so paid before termination of settlement of said case then to be paid out of any money or land so obtained or recovered at the time of settlement of the said case. ’ ’
On February 17, 1906, an agreement was reached between Bender and the railway company, its codefendants being its grantees of a part of the lands in controversy, and one of its purposes in defending the action being to protect them as such. By the terms of the compromise Bender agreed to waive his claim to the south half of the southwest quarter of section 27, by executing and delivering to the company a quitclaim deed, and to dismiss the action. The railway company on its part agreed to quitclaim to the United States the northwest quarter of the southwest quarter and lot 4 of said section 27, containing 53.36 acres, and to convey to Bender by warranty deed lot 3 and that portion of lot 2 lying south of a line extending east and west across this lot at a distance of fifty rods south from the north line of the section and parallel therewith, and containing 34.02 acres. The railway company also agreed to pay to Bender $2,000 in cash. The purpose of the quitclaim by the railway company to the United States was to enable Bender to secure a patent to the 53.36 acres directly from the United States, under the provisions of the Act of Congress approved July 1, 1898 (30 Stats, at Large, p. 597). The agreement was executed, with the result that Bender became vested with title to the 34.02 acres by deed from the railway company dated June 14, 1906, and to 53.36 acres by homestead patent from the United States dated December 5, 1907.
The brief of counsel contains many assignments of error upon specific rulings made during the progress of the trial. It will not be necessary to notice them in detail. The principal questions submitted for decision are whether the court correctly construed the agreement, and whether the rule adopted for the ascertainment of damages, as indicated by the admission of the evidence referred to and the instruction submitted to the jury, is the one applicable to this case.
The plaintiff and the defendant both stated that the writing contains the terms of their agreement as it was originally made. The intention is expressed that the plaintiff should, in addition to the cash payment, receive twelve and one-half per cent of the value of all lands to which the defendant should secure title at the final outcome of the action; for the language employed is “intending hereby that said G. W. Myers is to be paid for such legal services the said sum of $150, and twelve and one-half per cent of the value of all the land and money so recovered either by suit, compromise or arbitration or otherwise in any manner whatsoever.” This language clearly indicates that the parties intended to make all the lands obtained by the defendant, in connection with this action, from whatever sources the title might be derived, together with any amount of money paid1 to him, the basis upon which his contingent compensation should be calculated. The court’s construction of the agreement was therefore correct.
The very purpose of the action was to have determined Bender’s right to the area covered by his settlement. When the parties came to arrange their compromise, Bender might have taken a conveyance of the 53.36 acres directly from the railway company; for it held title under patent from the United States. Instead of pursuing this course, for some unexplained reason of his own he preferred, as the evidence shows, to obtain title directly from the United States. That he accomplished this result by requiring the railway company to relinquish its title under the provisions of the statute so as to put him in posi
The Bender lands adjoin the corporate limits of Miles City. It appears that after the title was secured by Bender a part
The contention is made that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the verdict. We shall not undertake to examine it in detail. Very little of it tends to establish definitely the value of any portion of the lands in controversy at or within a year subsequent to the date of the compromise agreement. We shall not presume that the plaintiff on another trial will not be able to show that their value at that time was such as to warrant the jury in awarding him a substantial amount.
Reversed and remanded.