206 N.W. 716 | Minn. | 1925
This is an action to recover for services pursuant to an alleged express contract. The complaint clearly states a cause of action upon a contract of employment to secure evidence and information desired and needed for the successful prosecution of such litigation. The contract was that plaintiffs should receive one-third of the fees coming into the hands of defendant from such litigation. The answer contained a general denial, some special denials, and alleged that, if such contract was made, it was illegal. The reply was a general denial.
Upon the trial an objection was made to the reception of evidence on the ground that if the agreement was made it was illegal. This was overruled. At the close of the evidence a directed verdict was sought on specified reasons, but was refused. Plaintiffs' verdict was for $6,658.40. The jury returned a special verdict saying that when the contract of employment was made plaintiffs did not know defendant's fees were contingent. They appealed from an order granting defendant's motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict.
Upon the trial the plaintiffs testified in great detail as to the services they rendered, but nowhere in the record is it made to appear that they solicited persons to become parties to the litigation or that the contract of employment so provided. Their principal mission seems to have been to interview bondholders and noteholders and ascertain what, if any, fraudulent representation induced them to invest. They also put defendant in touch with others who disclosed to him valuable information. Defendant denying the contract *377 claimed that, if it was made, it was in part illegal because plaintiffs were stirring up litigation on a contingent fee basis and were finding cases. He introduced some evidence tending to support this claim.
The memorandum of the trial court indicates that he granted the motion for two reasons, namely:
(1) His failure to allow the jury to decide whether the contract required plaintiffs to solicit clients. There was no occasion to do so. Plaintiffs' claim was to the contrary. Defendant denied any contract and did not request such charge in support of his claim of illegality in the event the jury found there was a contract nor did he take any exception because of the failure of the court to give such charge. Nor is there any such assignment of error in the motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or a new trial. It is well settled that the failure of the court to charge on a particular point is not ground for a new trial in the absence of a request for an instruction covering it. Outcelt v. C. B. Q. R. Co.
(2) That the language of the complaint was controlling and that such language embraced the element of soliciting clients as a part of the contract. If possible, language of a complaint alleging a contract must be construed in favor of a legal rather than an illegal *378
contract. We think, when the meaning of the language of a complaint is not certain and free from doubt, the better practice is to determine the validity of the contract upon the evidence at the trial. Lydiard v. Coffee,
Upon an appeal from an order as here involved the only question presented is whether the evidence is sufficient to sustain the verdict. Bosch v. C. M. S. P. Ry. Co.
This leaves the motion for a new trial pending and awaiting disposition by the trial court. Kies v. Searles,
Reversed. *379