78 Iowa 467 | Iowa | 1889
The arguments lead us to consider former decisions of this court bearing on the question, as. counsel for both parties claim support therefrom, and to some extent, as is frequently .the case, the opposing sides claim support from the same authority. The two grounds of the demurrer properly embody a proposition to this effect. Where attorneys in good faith render professional services for a wife in a divorce proceeding against her husband, does the law imply a promise on his part to pay therefor ? In considering the proposition it may be assumed that the law does imply such a promise as to necessaries for the wife. The cases cited for our consideration are Johnson v. Williams, 3 G. Greene, 97; Porter v. Briggs, 38 Iowa, 166, and Preston v. Johnson, 65 Iowa, 285. Counsel for appellant close their argument with the remark: “ We rest this case upon the law as laid down in Porter v. Briggs and Preston v. Johnson,” with a claim that the" former overrules the law as announced in Johnson v. Williams. Counsel for appellee with equal confidence
The conclusiveness of Johnson v. Williams as an authority against appellant is not questioned, unless it has been since overruled. It could not well be, for in a case like this it approved an instruction “that the defendant was not liable for professional services rendered to the wife of defendant in procuring a divorce and alimony, if such divorce and alimony are obtained, unless he was employed by defendant either in'person or agent, or unless defendant promised to pay, or unless he was ordered to pay for such by the court.” None of the grounds on which liability is recognized in the instruction are claimed in this case,
I. Is the rule announced in Johnson v. Williams overruled in Porter v. Briggs ? The very language of the case seems decisive of the question, and that it is not. By reference to the opinion, when referring to the case of Johnson v. Williams, it says: “The decision of that case is not in conflict with our conclusion above announced, while the reasons upon which it is based must be admitted to conflict with our views.” We suppose that correct decisions are sometimes not based on sound reasoning, and hence it does not necessarily follow that a conflict of views in opinions must lead to a conflict in the conclusions reached. We may not inaptly quote the remark that courts sometimes give “ very poor reasons for very good' decisions.” The court further attempts to distinguish the cases, and, again referring to Johnson v. Williams, says: “ It was not shown that the services rendered in the action for divorce in that case were necessary for the wife’s protection, — a fact that is the very ground upon which we base our conclusions in this case.” The holding of the court does not seem to have been based on any absolute right •of the wife to recover because of services rendered for her in a divorce proceeding, but because she was placed in a position where protection was necessary. The
II. We next look to the case of Preston v. Johnson to determine its effect on the question before us. A superficial view of the case is likely to give it an undue importance. The amount involved in the case was less than one hundred dollars, and the question for determination arose on the certificate of the circuit court. A reference to the opinion will show that the court in that-case held that the question before us did not arise in that case under the question certified. The opinion says: “ Counsel for the appellant insist that an implied promise on the part of the husband to pay for the services of an attorney employed by his wife to prosecute an action for divorce does not arise under the circumstances stated in the foregoing question. To tins' counsel for the appellee responds that no such question is presented by the record, and this we think is so. It is assumed in the question propounded that an implied liability is imposed on the husband to pay an attorney employed by his wife to prosecute an action for a divorce. We are simply asked whether the necessity for the services of the attorney would arise under the facts stated in the question.” Thus it will be seen that
A late case, that of Clyde v. Peavy, 74 Iowa, 47, is not cited by counsel, but it may be well to notice its bearing on the question before us, in order to save the rule as announced from embarrassment by it. And here, too, it is important to have well in mind the precise question under consideration by the court, to attach the proper significance to the language xised. It is true, in that case, that the opinion, by way of introducing the controverted question, states a rule of liability in somewhat liberal terms, but entirely correct, as applied to the facts of the case. • In that case, also,, the parties did not controvert the rule of a general liability of the husband for fees in such cases; the point of dispute therein being that the plaintiff was not employed by the wife, and that, if he rendered service,it was as assistant counsel, and that the assistance was unnecessary. The opinion says: “The principle has been established in this state that in actions for divorce the husband is liable to the wife’s attorney for reasonable fees earned in conducting the litigation in behalf qf the wife. This cannot be regarded as an open question.” It cites Porter v. Briggs and Preston v. Johnson. The point involved in the case of Preston v. Johnson has been noticed in this opinion, and its citation in that case must have been through inadvertence, the point having a mere incidental reference.- The case of Porter