304 Mass. 35 | Mass. | 1939
The plaintiff, an attorney, brought this action at law against the defendant, who is also an attorney, to recover the value of legal services rendered by the plaintiff in the preparation and trial of a suit in equity brought by minority stockholders of Beaudette & Graham Company, a Massachusetts corporation, to set aside an alleged illegal issue of stock. The defendants therein were one Graham, the president, general manager and a director of the corporation, and two other directors. The defendant in the present case had for some time been the attorney of Graham and of the corporation, and when the bill in equity was brought he entered his appearance for the defendants therein. Some months later, when a trial was imminent, at the request of the present defendant, the plaintiff entered his appearance for the defendants in the equity suit and thereafter rendered services in the preparation and trial of that suit, for which he here seeks compensation from the defendant.
The present case was tried before a judge of the Superior Court sitting without a jury. He found for the plaintiff. The case comes to this court on exceptions of the defendant to the refusal of the judge to give certain requested rulings of law and to certain rulings of law made. Such of the exceptions as have been argued by the defendant are here considered,
What was said, as well as what was not said, by the defendant in engaging the services of the plaintiff as counsel, on the version of the evidence most favorable to the plaintiff, could properly be deemed by the judge to be significant. Nothing was said during the talk about the wishes or intentions of the defendant’s clients as to the employment of the plaintiff. Nothing which was said indicated that a contract of employment was being made between the clients and the plaintiff. The defendant’s personal lack of experience in such a case was given by him as the reason for the plaintiff’s employment. He asked the plaintiff “to assist him” be
There was no evidence binding on the plaintiff to the effect that the clients authorized the defendant as their agent to employ the plaintiff at their expense. Such authority could not be implied merely from the fact that they employed the defendant as their counsel. An attorney employed by clients has no implied authority to employ other counsel at their expense. Porter v. Elizalde, 125 Cal. 204, 207. Rowell v. Ross, 91 Conn. 702, 705, 706. Chicago & Southern Traction Co. v. Flaherty, 222 Ill. 67, 70. Snyder v. Smith, 132 Neb. 504, 507, 508. Willard v. Danville, 45 Vt. 93, 97. See collection of cases, 90 Am. L. R. 266-269. Such an attorney may, of course, at his own expense employ other counsel to assist him. Scott v. Hoxsie, 13 Vt. 50. Vilas v. Bundy, 106 Wis. 168. Lathrop v. Hallett, 20 Colo. App. 207. Hyde v. Moxie Nerve Food Co. 160 Mass. 559. In order that clients shall be directly liable to such, other counsel there must be an authorization or a ratification of his employment. Northern Pacific Railway v. Clarke, 106 Fed. 794, 795. Culbert v. Hutton; 138 Va. 677.
The evidence here did not require the finding that there was either such authorization or such ratification. Knowledge by the clients that the attorney they employed was being assisted by other counsel who appeared in the case in court does not by itself warrant the finding of ratification. Those facts are as consistent with liability of the attorney they employed as they are with liability of the clients. Lathrop v. Hallett, 20 Colo. App. 207, 209, 210. Whitlow’s
The finding was warranted that there was no contract of employment between the plaintiff in this case and the defendants in the equity suit and that there was a contract of employment between the plaintiff and the defendant. The defendant’s fifth request for the ruling that there was no evidence on which it could be found that the defendant was a party to any contract with the plaintiff, and his first request for the ruling that “Upon all the evidence judgment should be entered for the defendant,” were properly denied.
The judge denied the defendant’s third and eighteenth requests.
The defendant’s seventh request to the effect that the plaintiff could not recover for his services in connection with the appeal from the final decree entered in the equity case was rightly denied. A finding was warranted that these services were impliedly authorized by the defendant. He paid the amount required to print -the record of the equity case on appeal and the brief of the defendants therein; his associate participated in the preparation of the brief; the
The defendant excepted to the denial of his fourth request for a ruling, which was to the effect that there was no evidence upon which it could be found that the defendant expressly agreed to compensate the plaintiff. This was in a group of requests denied by the judge, who stated as the reason “either because they are based on facts I do not find or are not applicable to the facts found.” Disapproval has frequently been voiced of such a statement of the reasons for the denial of requests by a judge without, as here, stating what facts were found by him. Mericantante v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 291 Mass. 261, 263. Freeman v. Crowell & Thurlow, Inc. 296 Mass. 514, 518, and cases cited. There was, as the request states, no evidence of an express agreement to compensate the plaintiff, but there was evidence of an express employment of the plaintiff in circumstances that warranted the finding of an implied agreement to compensate him. The judge’s general finding for the plaintiff was warranted, and his treatment of the defendant’s third and eighteenth requests indicates that he found an implied and not an express promise to compensate the plaintiff. The substantial rights of the defendant were not adversely affected by the denial of the fourth request.
Exceptions overruled.
“3. If the plaintiff knew at the time of his alleged employment that the defendant was acting for . . . [the defendants in the suit in equity], he cannot recover in this case unless the evidence shows that the defendant expressly agreed to pay for the plaintiff’s services.”
“18. If there is evidence that at the time of the alleged contract of employment of the plaintiff by the defendant, the plaintiff knew that the defendant was acting as agent for disclosed principals, the burden is on the plaintiff to show that the defendant expressly promised to pay the plaintiff.”