105 Neb. 773 | Neb. | 1921
This is an action by plaintiff against the defendants, and each of them, to recover for attorney’s fees rendered by the plaintiff for the defendants at their request and for cost and expenses paid and expended. Trial had to a jury, who returned a verdict for the plaintiff and against the defendants for the sum of $400.89. Judgment on the verdict. Defendants appeal.
The plaintiff, a practicing attorney in the city of Lincoln, was employed by certaih residents, citzens and taxpayers of school district No. 139 of Lancaster county, Nebraska, in reference to the establishment of a location for a schoolhouse and the voting of bonds. There is no contention but what the services were rendered and that the plaintiff was employed to render them. The contract was oral. The defense is principally that the cause of action
Section 7598 reads as follows: “Any person may be made a defendant who has or claims an interest in the controversy adverse to the plaintiff, or who is a necessary party to a complete determination or settlement of the question involved therein.”
Section 7599 provides: “Of the parties to the action, those who are united in interest must be joined as plaintiffs or defendants; but if the consent of one who should have been joined as plaintiff cannot be obtained, he may be made a defendant, the reason being stated in the petition.”
The testimony shows that the contract was made with the parties named defendants, and also one Douglas H. Roberts and L. L. Turner; it also shows that they are living, and no attempt was shown why they should not have been made parties and service had upon them. The employment was very informal in its nature. A meeting was held at Bethany, in which said district is located, and the defendants, or some of them, and also the said Roberts and Turner being jointly interested with all other defendants, and seeking the same object, attended said meeting,
Decisions upon contracts of this kind are rare. Usually some instrument in writing or some formal acknowledgment of a contract is produced under which the parties claim, but in the instant case the services were rendered at the request of certain parties. The contract on the part of the plaintiff included no agreement as to the price to be paid for the service, and no agreement as to who should pay the cost and expense incidental to carrying on the litigation. Questions arose as to the value of the services, the payment of the costs, and other matters connected with the litigation that ensued, among which, and on which the defendants rely principally as a defense (outside of the demurrer), was the fact that an agent, as contended by the defendants, made an agreement after the services were nearly completed by which the payment of $400 by the defendants to the plaintiff would be in full satisfaction of all claims and demands plaintiff might have against them for services rendered and expenses and costs advanced. There was also a complaint on the part of the defendants that the court had failed to give certain instructions requested, and gave on his own motion certain erroneous instructions.
In view of the conclusion at which we have arrived, it will only be necessary to enter upon the discussion of the one question, whether the plaintiff can maintain this action against these defendants without' joining as defendants the parties heretofore specified. “Where two persons Avere responsible on the sealed instructions to pay for the erection of a building, and both superintended the work, one acting in the other’s absence, and always with a joint view to the same object, a parol promise by each at different times, to waive the written contract and pay the reasonable value, makes the promise joint.” Munroe v. Perkins, 20 Am. Dec. 475 ( 9 Pick. (Mass.) 298).
In the case of Alpaugh v. Wood, 53 N. J. Law, 638, the court held: “ Wherever an obligation is undertaken by two or more persons, the general presumption is that it is a joint and not a several obligation; and this presumption is strengthened when the promisors have undertaken to accomplish together a single result. Such presumption is not defeated by the fact that each promisor is to contribute separately to the entire result for which they bargain, and is entitled to a distinct interest under the contract, for which he would have a separate remedy.”
In Field & Field v. Runk, 22 N. J. Law, 525, the principle laid down in the preceding case was affirmed.
In the case of Dumanoise v. Townsend, 80 Mich 302, the court in the opinion say: “And- in determining whether there is a joint interest in the contract the benefit accruing from the contract has an important bearing.”
In the case of Fox v. Abbott, 12 Neb. 328, Judge Maxwell in the opinion says: “ The supreme court of Ohio in construing section 77 of the Code (section 84 of Nebraska) say: ‘ In an action upon a joint contract, all who are jointly liable must be joined. In this respect the rule of the common law has not been changed by our Code.’ ” Affirmed in Young v. Joseph Bros. & Davidson, 5 Neb. (Unof.) 559, and Gyger v. Courtney, 59 Neb. 555.
In Perkins County v. Miller, 55 Neb. 141, this court .held: “In an action upon a joint contract, all who are jointly liable should be joined as defendants, and if ser
In the case of Bowen v. Crow, 16 Neb. 556, the court in the opinion states: “ The only question presented to this court for consideration is, whether or not an action can be maintained against one of several joint debtors alone, or whether the action should be against all. The law seems to be settled that the action must be against all.”
Under the light of the cited authorities, and many others that might be cited to the same effect, we are compelled to come to the conclusion that the liability of the defendants was joint, and that the plaintiff should have united in the action, or in some way account for not so doing, the other two obligors. The test running through all of the authorities seemed to be whether the services rendered were for the joint benefit of all; they all stood upon an equality; the action was not for the benefit of one of them, but of all of them; it was inseparable. The determination of the actions which plaintiff was employed to prosecute would be for or against them all jointly, and not severally.
We come to this conclusion very reluctantly; we see no escape from this dilemma. Our statute is only an affirmation of the common law rule prevailing as to the necessity of making all obligees jointly interested. parties. In the case of Harker v. Burbank, 68 Neb. 85, Judge Barnes, in writing the opinion, states: “ It is thoroughly settled at the common law that joint obligees must sue jointly in actions ex contractu, and if it appears on the face of the pleadings in such cases that there are other parties to the contract who ought to be joined as plaintiffs, but are not, it is fatal to the action, and the defendant may raise the objection by demurrer or by motion in arrest of judgment, or he may urge it as a ground of reversal on error.”
The common law rule of the necessity of making all those jointly liable parties has been modified in some states by statute, more especially in the state of Iowa. The legislature of Iowa must have conceived that in modern conditions, relations, and necessities, as -they exist, the com
We see no necessity of entering into any further discussion. As the answer denied that the plaintiff had made all the necessary parties defendants, the case was tried on that as one of the issues. The defendants have insisted at the trial and in their briefs' that it was a fatal defect for which plaintiff would not be entitled to recover against these defendants.
We therefore recommend that the judgment of the lower court be reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
Pee Curiam. For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion, the judgment of the district court is reversed and the cause remanded, and this opinion is adopted by and made the opinion of the court.
Reversed.