198 So. 552 | Miss. | 1940
This appeal is from a decree of the chancery court allowing and directing the payment of a contested claim in the sum of $200 against the estate of Miss Inez O. Lum, deceased, which had been duly probated, registered and allowed for professional services rendered to the said Miss Lum during her lifetime by the law firm of Dent, Robinson Ward, appellee. *662
Upon the hearing the appellee introduced as its only competent evidence to establish the claim the testimony of Julius Fohs, a former employee of the deceased, and Miss Bessie Davis, stenographer of the said law firm. Fohs testified, in substance, that he went with his said employer, about a year prior to her death, on two or three occasions to the office of the appellee, where, in each instance, according to his information, she had a conference with a member of the law firm in regard to her undivided interest in the Washington Hotel at Vicksburg, on which she was having trouble regarding the collection of her share of the rents, and the sale of which hotel property under partition proceedings she then had in contemplation; and was also having some business dealings with a Dr. Martin, in connection with which certain papers were being drawn by said attorneys but which latter services were fully compensated for by Dr. Martin, as is elsewhere disclosed by the record. The stenographer, Miss Davis, testified on behalf of the appellee that Miss Lum first started coming to the law office prior to 1935, left some papers there on one occasion, and had at least two dozen conferences with a member of the firm, but she did not learn what was discussed in the conferences, other than the Dr. Martin transaction. No papers were ever prepared by appellee in connection with the proposed partition sale of the Washington Hotel, if such a proceeding was ever instituted or conducted, and there was no proof of any legal services other than in the conferences mentioned by this witness, and those paid for by Dr. Martin as aforesaid. Although the stenographer testified that the law firm sometimes mailed out bills for legal services to their clients, it was not shown that any fixed charge or other memorandum was ever entered regarding the number and dates of the conferences referred to, or that any bill for such services was ever rendered to Miss Lum prior to her death in 1937, so as to establish the correctness of the claim by silence or acquiescence on her part. *663
It was held in the cases of North, Adm'r, v. Lowe,
No such contract or agreement having been shown whereby Miss Lum was to pay any specific amount of compensation for the services rendered, the estate could be required to pay only such fees therefor as should be found reasonable. No testimony was taken on that issue, and, under our view of the case, the claimant failed to meet the burden of showing either the nature, character or extent of the services rendered, so as to enable the chancellor to fix a reasonable allowance, since it does not appear, except by conjecture, as to what particular matters were considered in the several conferences, so far as the competent evidence is concerned. And, to paraphrase the language of the Court in the case of King et al. v. Stauddy's Estate et al.,
But in view of the fact that the evidence tends to show that the claimant is entitled to some compensation for the conferences held with Miss Lum, pertaining to her business affairs, we have concluded to reverse and remand the case for the fixation of a reasonable fee in the event the nature, extent and value of the legal services rendered can be established with reasonable certainty by competent evidence, without regard to the supporting affidavit of the claimant attached to the probated claim.
Reversed and Remanded.