STATE FARM MUTUAL AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE COMPANY, Appellee,
v.
Earl B. SELDERS, Appellant,
Impleaded with Ila Selders et al., Appellees.
Supreme Court of Nebraska.
Moyer & Moyer, Madison, for appellant.
Deutsch & Hagen, Thomas H. DeLay, Norfolk, for appellee.
Heard before WHITE, C. J., and SPENCER, BOSLAUGH, SMITH, McCOWN, NEWTON and CLINTON, JJ.
CLINTON, Justice.
This appeal involves the question of the right to an allowance to attorney's fees under section 44-359, R.S.Supp., 1972. The defendant (appellant here), Earl B. Selders, was successful in this court in an action for a declaratory judgment initiated by the plaintiff in having determined that his deceased children, victims of an uninsured motorist, were insureds under the policy issued to him. The children thus came within the uninsured motorist coverage of that policy. We held that Selders would be entitled to recover under the policy for losses he incurred by reason of the death of the children if the uninsured motorist was liable. See State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Selders,
Selders relies upon our recent decision in Workman v. Great Plains Ins. Co., Inc.,
The plaintiff cites and relies upon Cunningham v. Northwestern Mut. Life Ins. Co.,
We do not think the allowance of the attorney's fee should depend upon who brings the action. The insured prevailed and the allowance of attorney's fee is under the circumstances within the purposes of the statute as interpreted by this court in Workman v. Great Plains Ins. Co., Inc., supra. At the time the trial court made its order in this case Workman v. Great Plains Ins. Co., Inc., supra, had not been decided.
Cunningham v. Northwestern Mut. Life Ins. Co., supra, was not an action upon the policy in the ordinary sense of that term. That was an action by the insured during his lifetime to have a determination made as to whether a premium upon his life insurance policy had been paid in time and so avoid a forfeiture of the policy.
The plaintiff contends that no attorney's fees can be allowed because the defendant presented no evidence from which the reasonable value of the services could be determined. The plaintiff says that Luikart v. Flannigan,
In the instant case the judge by whom the motion for attorney's fees was heard had available to him by reason of the previous appeal the trial record in the form of the bill of exceptions used in the appeal in the declaratory judgment action. No doubt the judge conducting the trial has a more detailed and personal knowledge of the services rendered. Certainly either the presiding judge or the judge who hears the motion for attorney's fees may receive additional evidence of value. In this case the *627 record supports an inference that the court denied the attorney's fees, not because of lack of evidence of value, but because it considered that the defendant as a matter of law was not entitled to an award of attorney's fees under the statute.
That part of the judgment of the court below denying the allowance of the attorney's fees is reversed and the cause is remanded with directions for further proceedings consonant with this opinion. The defendant is allowed a fee of $250 for services of his attorney in this court.
Affirmed in part, and in part reversed and remanded with directions.
