Scholey v. Demattos
Scholey v. Demattos
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court- was delivered by
This was an action commenced in the superior court of Whatcom county by respondent against appellant to foreclose a real estate mortgage executed to secure the payment of a promissory note amounting to $12,-000. The answer was a general denial and an allegation that the attorney’s fee claimed by respondent was excessive and unreasonable. An attorney’s fee of $1,600 was
“ In all judgments on promissory notes, and similar instruments in writing, whether secured by mortgage or not, an attorney’s [fee] may be allowed when specially contracted to be paid by tbe terms of tbe note or mortgage in any amount so specially contracted.”
If tbis act is constitutional, and there is no contention tbat it is not, it seems to us tbat it is a plain answer to appellant’s contention; tbe law-making power of tbe state has made tbe amount contracted stipulated damages and there is nothing left for tbe court to do but to enforce tbe contract. It may be, and doubtless is, true tbat abuses and oppressions have grown up under tbis statute, but tbis was a policy which was submitted to tbe judgment of tbe legislature, and, they having adopted that policy, there is no discretion left in tbe courts. There is a question in this case, however, which, if it bad been properly presented, would call for consideration, and tbat is tbe attempt on tbe part of tbe appellant to show tbat a contract existed under tbe terms of which tbe attorney for tbe respondent was to receive a less amount for bis services than tbe amount specified in tbe contract. But tbis question was not raised by tbe pleadings in tbis case, as we have before seen; so far as tbe pleadings are concerned, touching tbis question there was simply an allegation tbat tbe attorney’s fee
The judgment is affirmed.
Scott, O. J., and Anders and Gordon, JJ., cpncur.
Concurring Opinion
I concur solely on the ground of former decisions of the court, and not as an original construction of the statute.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Edmund D. Scholey v. James P. DeMattos
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- PROMISSORY NOTES — ATTORNEY’S PEE — ALLOWABLE AS STIPULATED DAMAGES—PLEADING AND PROOF. Under Code Proe., § 803, providing for the allowance in a judgment on a promissory note or mortgage of the amount of attorney’s fee specially contracted in the instrument to be paid in ease of suit, the amount contracted for must be construed as stipulated damages to which the plaintiff is entitled, although the sum allowed may greatly exceed the value of the services rendered. In an action upon a note and mortgage to which the only defenses pleaded are a general denial and an allegation that the attorney’s fee claimed is excessive and unreasonable, evidence on the part of defendant is not admissible for the purpose of proving that the contract between plaintiff and his attorney for fees in such action is for a sum much smaller than the attorney’s fee provided for in the note and mortgage. The rule that in equity proceedings the pleadings may be considered as amended in accordance with the proof offered, cannot be invoked when it would work an injury to the other party by taking him by surprise and by compelling him to litigate an essential question concerning which he had had no notice.