Court Opinion

ID: 4720041
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-08-12 02:35:43.703781+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:07:36.212218
License: Public Domain

Fullerton, J.
The respondent, Segrid Henrickson, brought this action against the appellants, O. J. Smith and Hilda M. Smith, to recover the sum of $870 which she claims the appellant O. J. Smith, in his capacity as her attorney, collected for her use and did not account. In her complaint she alleged, in substance, that the appellants are husband and wife and as such form a marital community under the laws of the state of Washington; that the appellant O. J. Smith is an attorney at law, duly licensed to practice in the courts of the state of Washington; that, on November 7, 1916, she was struck by an automobile operated by one George O’Reilley, and sustained an injury to her person; that she employed the appellant C. J. Smith to act as her attorney in the prosecution of her claim against O’Reilley, no terms of employment being agreed upon; that the appellant accepted such employment and thereafter brought an action against O’Reilley, which action, after'issue joined, was compromised, settled and dismissed without trial, O’Reilley paying to the appellant C. J. Smith, for her use and benefit, the sum of $1,400; that of this sum the appellant paid on her account a physician’s bill in the sum of $175, hospital charges in the sum of $100, and court costs in the sum of $5; that his services as attorney in her behalf were reasonably worth the sum of $250, but no more; that the appellants have retained all of the sum so collected, save such as he has paid as before stated, and claims that the respondent is entitled to receive of the sum collected $395 thereof. She then *84alleges that there is due and owing to her from the appellant C. J. Smith, and.from the marital community-composed of C. J. Smith and Hilda M. Smith, the sum of $870, in which sum she demands judgment.
The appellants appeared separately, in response to process served upon them, and demurred to the complaint on the grounds that there was a defect of parties defendant, and that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The demurrers were overruled, whereupon the appellants filed separate answers to the complaint. The appellant C. J. Smith, after certain denials, set up three affirmative defenses. The first was a claim for services performed and money loaned to the respondent, disconnected with the transaction for which she sues, on which there was -due him the sum of $51.50. In the second defense he set out his version of the transaction out of which the present action arises. He alleged that, after the respondent was injured by the automobile, he visited her at her request and then agreed orally with her to investigate the matter and ascertain whether in his judgment a collectible judgment could be obtained; agreeing, further, that, in the event an action should be brought and a recovery had, he would charge her as a fee for his services fifty per centum of the amount of the recovery. That he did investigate the matters and concluded to bring the action, and thereupon reduced the oral contract of employment to writing, which the respondent executed in the presence of two witnesses. He then alleges the commencement of the action, its settlement by the payment by the defendants therein of the sum of $1,400, and that out of this sum he was entitled to deduct the agreed fee, the sums he had paid for the respondent’s use, the respondent’s indebtedness to him, and the costs of *85the action, which left a balance in favor of the respondent in the sum of $425.
The third affirmative defense is a counterclaim in damages for the sum of $3,035.20 for libel. lie alleges that, after the settlement of the action he had instituted for the respondent, and the difficulty had arisen between them, the respondent made complaint to the grievance committee of the Seattle Bar Association of his conduct with reference to the case,
u Thereby publishing that the defendant had committed a breach against the laws of the state of Washington, and particularly to have committed the crime of barratry;”
averring that the charges were false and libelous, were so found to be by the committee named, and that, by reason thereof, he had been damaged in the sum named.
The answer of the appellant Hilda M. Smith was in substance a general denial.
A reply was filed, denying in substance the first and second of the affirmative defenses, and a denial of the allegations of injury caused by the filing of the charges. To the latter were pleaded also the affirmative defenses that the charge was filed in good faith and was therefore privileged, and that it did not arise out of the transaction which gave rise to the subject-matter of her cause of action.
The action was twice tried by jury, and resulted in both instances in verdicts according to the demand of the complaint. The first verdict was set aside by the trial court because it believed it contrary to the evidence. On the second, a judgment was entered, and is the judgment from which the present appeal is prosecuted.
It is first assigned that the court erred in overruling the demurrers to the complaint. It is argued that the delinquency charged against the appellant O. J. Smith *86constitutes a tort for which he alone is liable, unless it was committed in the conduct of the community business, or in business conducted for its benefit, of which there is no allegation in the complaint. But we cannot concur in this view of the pleadings. The complaint sets forth a tort perhaps in the sense that all breaches of contract are torts, but the matter alleged does not constitute a tort in the ordinary sense of that term. It shows merely a breach of duty in a business conducted by the husband. The fact that marital relation exists, and the further fact that- the business conducted by the husband is his ordinary business, raises at once the presumption that the business is a community''btisiness. The presumption has the force of fact, and can be overcome only by countervailing allegations and proofs presented by the party who would dispute the presumption. It is not necessary that the pleader, claiming under the general rule, negative the exceptions thereto which could exist.
It is next assigned that the court erred in refusing to sustain the motion for nonsuit interposed on behalf of the appellant Hilda M. Smith. The correctness of this ruling depends upon the principle just discussed. The evidence was perhaps somewhat broader than the allegations of the complaint, since it showed, in addition to the existence of a marital relation between the appellants and that the business of the appellant husband was the practice of the law, that the appellant wife sometimes assisted him therein. But to prove the facts set forth in the complaint was sufficient to authorize the submission of the cause to the jury. As we say, these facts raised a presumption that the business was a community business, and there was no evidence contrary to the presumption. It is true that no judgment was sought against the wife personally. But *87judgment was sought against the community, and the wife is always a proper party in such a case.
The third assignment is that the court erred in rejecting evidence offered to substantiate the matter alleged in the third affirmative defense. But the action of the court was properly sustained on the ground that facts pleaded were not a proper subject of counterclaim. The code (§ 265, Rem.) permits counterclaims to be set up in answer only where the cause of action sought to be counterclaimed arises out of the contract or transaction set forth in the complaint as the foundation of the plaintiff’s claim, or where it is connected with the subject of the action, or where the action is one on contract and the cause of action sought to be set forth also arises on contract and exists at commencement of the action. It is plain, we think, that these provisions do not include the cause of action here presented as a counterclaim. While the transaction set forth in the complaint as the foundation of the respondent’s cause' of action may have been the cause for making the complaint before the grievance committee of the bar association, yet such complaint was in no manner connected, either in law or fact, with that transaction. It was independent of it, and any cause of action arising therefrom must likewise be so independent. It is hardly necessary to add that the ^remaining provisions of the code furnish no foundation for the attempted counterclaim. There was no connection between the facts set forth as a counterclaim and the transaction set forth in the complaint, within the meaning of the' code, nor did the cause of action set forth arise on contract.
The fourth assignment is that the court erred in refusing to direct a verdict for the appellants and in refusing to grant their motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. The principal controversy be*88tween the parties was over the question whether there was a contract between the appellant C. J. Smith and the respondent as to the fee Smith was to receive for his services. On this issue Smith not only testified to an oral agreement entered into at the time he was first employed, but produced a writing setting forth such an agreement purporting to bear the signature of the respondent. He also produced two witnesses whose signatures appear as witnesses to the purported signature of the respondent on the written instrument, and who. testified that the respondent signed the instrument in their presence. On the other side was the testimony of the respondent alone. She testified that there was no agreement as to compensation between herself and the appellant C. J. Smith, and that she did not sign the paper which purports to bear her name. Based on this condition of the record, the appellants argue that the evidence is so overwhelming on their side as to require the court either to direct a verdict in their favor or to enter a judgment for them against the adverse verdict of the jury. But the rule is not such as this argument implies. By an express provision of the constitution of the state, and by the general laws, a litigant has the absolute right to- have disputed questions of fact submitted to the determination of a jury. The appellate court, as well as the trial court, has power to see that such questions are properly submitted to the jury, and it is within the power of the trial court to set aside a verdict which he is convinced is contrary to the evidence and submit the disputed question to another jury. But this is the limit of the power. Judges of courts cannot, without violating' the fundamental law, substitute their opinions, on disputed questions of fact', for the opinion of juries, and enter judgment contrary to verdicts of such juries. -So- here, since there was a substantial *89dispute in the evidence on a matter material to the inquiry, the court did not err in refusing to direct a verdict for the appellants, or in refusing to grant judgment in their favor notwithstanding the verdict.
In this connection it is argued that the court abused its discretion in refusing to grant a new trial. But there have been two trials of the cause, in each of which the jury has found against the appellants. In each of the trials the particular issue was emphasized, and it is to the interest of the public that there be an end to particular litigation. However strongly, therefore, we may believe the verdict to be contrary to the evidence, we cannot say that the trial court erred in the ruling.
The other assignments relate to the admission of certain testimony and to the court’s charge to the jury, but these require no extended discussion. The evidence complained of, even if it could be said to be immaterial, was not prejudicial, and the.court’s charge generally was as favorable to the appellant as the evidence warranted.
Lastly, it is claimed that the judgment entered was a personal judgment against the appellant Hilda M. Smith. The judgment was in the following form:
". . . the court, being fully advised in the premises, doth order, adjudge and decree that the plaintiff do have and recover of and from the defendant, C. J. Smith, and of and from the community composed of the defendants, C. J. Smith and Hilda M. Smith, his wife, and each of them, the sum of Eight Hundred Thirty-six ($836) Dollars together with interest thereon at the rate of 6% per annum from November 15, 1917, until paid, together with the costs and disbursements of the plaintiff herein to be taxed according to law, and that execution issue upon said judgment. ’ ’
*90This, we are clear, is a personal judgment against O. J. Smith and against the community composed of C. J. Smith and Hilda M. Smith, and not a judgment on which the separate property of Hilda M. Smith can be held. The objectionable clause, from the appellant’s point of view, is found in the phrase “and each of them,” following the individual names of the appellants. But plainly this refers to the “community composed of the defendants,” and not to the defendants severally.
The judgment is affirmed.
Mount, Tolman, and Bridges, JJ., concur.