Yoakley v. Hawley
Yoakley v. Hawley
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
Yoakley brought this action against a number of defendants, charging them with breaking open his storehouse and seizing and carrying away a valuable lot of tobacco. The action Was dismissed as to all the defendants except John Hawley, Adam Bowery, Francis Wolf and George Galloway, as to whom the cause was finally tried, resulting in a verdict and judgment in favor of said defendants. A new tx-ial being refused, the plaintiff has appealed in error.
“Messrs. York and Deaderiek: Gents — Please withdraw all pleas, so far as I am concerned, in the case of Peter Yoakley v. John Hawley and others. X have employed no counsel and desire to make no defense. Respectfully, Adam Bowery. Attest: Henry Ford.”
Said attorneys stated to the court at the time they had been counsel for said Bowery and were concerned in the suit as to their fees. That they represented another party who had attached in another suit in •chancery the same land which the plaintiff had attached in this case as Bowery’s. Said other party had attached the land as the property of R. H. Young, to whom Bowery had conveyed it a few days subsequent to the levy of attachment in this case. The land had been sold in the chancery suit, the sale confirmed, and the proceeds of the sale notes were going to parties represented by said York and Deaderiek. They proposed to prove these facts by the records, but they were admitted by plaintiff’s counsel. Said attorneys further stated that they did not know the abovp mentioned order to be genuine, and that they did not propose to act upon it, but only brought it to the attention of the court to relieve themselves of the imputation of having suppressed or concealed the matter.
Plaintiff’s counsel also moved the court for a rule
There is no reason to question the authority of Messrs. York and Deaderick to appear and defend the cause for said Bowery in the first instance. But a party has always the right to control his case, and lie has the absolute right to revoke the authority of his attorney to prosecute or defend in his name. The attorney cannot prosecute or defend in the name of his client against the latter’s consent. The fact that the attorney may be interested to continue the defense in order to secure his fee, does not give the right to control the case.
Nor does the fact that the interest of another client of the attorney in this case requires that this suit should be defended, give the attorneys the right to take the control of this cause as to Bowery out of his hands.
It may be that Bowery is acting in collusion with the plaintiff, with the purpose of injuriously affecting the rights of other parties in the property attached, yet if for any reason he chooses to let a judgment go in favor of Yoakley in this case, prima fade at least, he has the right to do so. What may be the effect of such a judgment as to the rights of the other parties, or whether such other parties may have any remedy to prevent such a course, are questions not now before us.
Thq order, introduced with the evidence in regard
The action of the court in this respect was therefore erroneous, and it must be reversed and the cause remanded.
But this does not affect the case as to the other defendants, as to whom there was a regular trial, if there be no error in the record. As to them the judgment in their favor should be affirmed.
The first error assigned, as to said defendants, is in the admission of the testimony of Col. Terry, to the effect that, as colonel in the Confederate army, during the late war, he received a printed circular order from the Confederate secretary of war, directing the confiscation of the property of all persons who had gone beyond the Confederate lines into the Federal lines, and that tobacco was one of the articles specified, that the order received by him had been destroyed. It --should be stated that the seizure of the plaintiff’s tobacco occurred during the war. The defense in
If this objection were valid it should have been stated at the time, so as to give the parties an opportunitj»- to meet the objection, but it was not valid. The circular received by Col. Terry was shown to have been destroyed, and no copy is shown to have been in existence. Besides, it would probably be impracticable to procure a copy of the original from which Col. Terry’s copy was taken, or to prove it to be a copy. There is no evidence that such a paper is in existence.
Next, objection is taken to the charge of the circuit judge upon the question of admissions made by parties to a cause. The objection is that the jury, were told that admissions should be received cautiously, as they might be made in a casual conversation, and because of the difficulty of disproving them, and were not told in the same connection that when deliberately and understandingly made they are the highest grade of evidence. Conceding the charge to be inaccurate, it is clear that the jury could not have been mislead, because there was really little or no controversy
The plea under which the defense was made did not perhaps properly present the real defense, that is, that the defendants were acting under the orders of Col. Terry, but only avers that the seizure was a legitimate act of war. The replication, however, goes farther than the plea, and denies that the seizure was under the order of superior officers, directly putting this question in issue, and, besides, after a demurrer had been sustained, an agreement was made for the purpose, as it- recites, of having a trial on the merits, by which it was agreed that the judgment on the demurrer should be set aside, and the plea reinstated and issue taken thereon. In this view, we think there was no error in admitting in evidence the order of Col. Terry, although not specially set up in the plea.
The plaintiff, Yoaldey, was not, by reason of his Union sympathies, an enemy to the Confederate government. On the contrary, his residence within the limits of tihe Confederate lines made him an enemy of the United States, and he might have been so treated. But the Confederates might, according to the usages of war, treat as an enemy one of their citizens who had voluntarily gone into the enemy's lines as the plaintiff had done. At all events, they might
There is no error except as to Bowery; the judgment as to him will be reversed, and as to the other defendants affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.