Thorn v. Beard
Thorn v. Beard
Opinion of the Court
—This action was brought by an attorney, to recover for services rendered to his client. They covered a period extending from September, 1887, to March or April
But beyond what was involved in the equity suit and the accounting before the surrogate, there seemed to have been two questions raised by the defendant which were important to him, and as to which the interest of his children was identical with his own. These were whether the executors under the will were entitled to commissions not only as such, but also as trustees under the trust provisions of that instrument; and whether a bill of sale for a dredge plant executed for a
The two subjects came up while the litigations over the will were in progress. Thorn testifies that he told defendant that neither question was involved in or could be determined by the suit for construction of the will or the accounting of the personal estate which were in progress; that defendant’s remedy would be by an action thereafter to be commenced to remove the executor who held the bill of sale and restore the subject matter of it to the estate; but that he, Thorn, would not enter upon that litigation unless he could entirely control it.
I quote his testimony: “ I said we will go through this matter, but when we come to the suit for the accounting and for the discharging of the trustees I am going to do the business in my own name and in my own way, or I won’t do it; you have put me to a great deal of trouble here, you are tenacious, I will run your litigation or you will run it; well, he says, I engage you now to run that litigation, do you hear? ‘Yes, in my name?’ ‘Yes.’ Well, I have fished behind the net long enough and I cannot handle myself, and I intend to be where I can protect myself fully, and I want you to talk a great deal less, if you will, Colonel, and let me have my own way a good deal more or less; I want you to let me alone. ' Mr. N. B. Haight was present when that conversation occurred, and the thing was discussed thereafter, and it was understood that just as soon as we got the judgment perfected and matters straight in this construction suit, that that matter, then fully discussed, was to be started in action, Oliver T. Beard against the balance.
“ Q. After the completion of that other suit, fixing as to income, that suit was not commenced? A. We split.”
He testified again that when the subject of the bill of sale to defendant’s brother came up in a discussion over the accounting he told the defendant “ to let it alone and it would all come up in the big suit.” It seems to me to be the just result of the testimony that while Thorn was acting as guardian ad litem for the infants he was also more or less advising defendant in directions hostile to their interests; that in the course of those discussions the double commissions which might or might not be charged and the bill of sale were talked about; that those matters were incidental and came up at first before the relation of attorney and client was established between Thorn and defendant; that it was not to be established until after the existing litigations were out of the way and Thorn left unhampered by his position as guardian ad litem ; that he refused to be employed in his existing situation, and only on condition that he could act in his own name and in his own way; and that the only employment by defendant to which he anywhere testified was a retainer to bring an independent suit after the close of the existing litigations. Now that suit he never brought. He did not enter upon the stipulated employment. He never even offered to bring it or tendered his services for that purpose.
On the contrary he presented an unjust bill, and then sued upon it, making impossible the future relation contemplated. In other words, he neither performed nor offered to perform the contract of employment to which he testified, but put himself in an attitude toward the defendant which would have justified the latter in refusing his services if he had tendered them. And beyond that I can discover no evidence that Thorn did any labor or performed any work after the
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
All concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- William I. Thorn v. Oliver T. Beard
- Status
- Published