201 N.W. 630 | Minn. | 1925
The present action is to recover the attorneys' fees plaintiff expended in the first mentioned suit. When plaintiff rested, having proved the facts above recited, and that she had paid her attorneys in that suit $700, which was no more than a reasonable fee, the court, on motion of the defendants, dismissed the action. From a motion denying a new trial, plaintiff appeals.
The question presented by this appeal seems to have been settled more than 50 years ago in this state by Kelly v. Rogers,
Counsel for plaintiff base the right of recovery upon Bergquist v. Kreidler,
It is also to be noted that in the cases cited in Bergquist v. Kreidler, as authority for the recovery of attorneys' fees, all involve attorneys' fees incurred either in litigation with third parties or in recovering property from third parties where the litigation or the loss of property was caused by the wrongful act of the one subsequently sued for damages, including the expenses of the prior litigation with third parties or with the recovery of property from them. None relate to the recovery of counsel fees paid in a prior action between the same parties. The cases are; First Nat. Bank *460
v. Williams,
Inhabitants of Westfield v. Mayo,
"* * * as a general rule, when a party is called upon to defend a suit, founded upon a wrong, for which he is held responsible in law without misfeasance on his part, but because of the wrongful act of another, against whom he has a remedy over, counsel fees are the natural and reasonably necessary consequence of the wrongful act of the other, if he has notified the other to appear and defend the suit. When, however, the claim against him is upon his own contract, or for his own misfeasance, though he may have a remedy against another and the damages recoverable may be the same as the amount of the judgment recovered against himself, counsel fees paid in defence of the suit against himself are not recoverable."
We think this case is no authority for recovery of counsel fees here, but the reverse. Who became the plaintiff and who the substituted defendant in the suit against the Modern Woodmen, depended simply upon whether the beneficiary in the last certificate or in the first was the quicker to sue. The contending parties here were the contending parties in the former action, and the costs taxed therein included all the attorneys' fees and expenses for which defendants are in law liable to plaintiff.
The order is affirmed. *461