Opinion
April Term, 1902.
William McArthur, for the appellant.
Frank H. Innes and M.L. Ryan, for the respondent.
Two conflicting theories were presented by the evidence, and the jury, after listening to a charge to which the defendant took no exceptions, has resolved the facts in favor of the plaintiff. The conclusion is fully supported by the evidence and the verdict in the absence of reversible error must be conclusive.
The plaintiff, as the assignee of a claim for services rendered by one Thomas B. Jones, an attorney and counselor of this court, brings this action to recover a balance of $100 alleged to be due him upon a contract between Mr. Jones and the defendant, by which the latter undertook to pay to the former the sum of $300 for services in the conduct of two certain actions for slander, the details of which are not material to this discussion. The defendant has paid, and is credited with $200 on this account, though he contends that the contract of employment was for $100, and that the other $100 was for disbursements. But upon this point the jury has passed, and it has found that the contention of the plaintiff is the true one.
The defendant urges that he was entitled to a dismissal of the complaint, because, as he alleges, the action shows upon its face that it was prematurely brought. The complaint alleges that "between the first day of July, 1899, and the first day of October, 1899," certain services were rendered to the defendant. The summons in the action was served on the sixteenth day of September, 1899, and the complaint was verified on the tenth day of October, and the defendant urges that by this form of pleading the way was left open to prove services down to and including the first day of October, and that the right of action had not fully matured at the date of serving the summons. The complaint, however, alleges on information and belief, that "the said defendant was justly indebted to the said Thomas B. Jones on or about the 13th day of September, 1899, on account of such services in the sum of one hundred dollars ($100), no part of which has been paid." This was the day on which the final judgments were entered in the slander actions, and was three days before the service of the summons in this action, and we are of the opinion that the allegations of the complaint, when read together, fully stated a cause of action, and the proofs were in accordance with these allegations. Section 723 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that at "every stage of the action, the court must disregard an error or defect in the pleadings or other proceedings, which does not affect the substantial rights of the adverse party." Certainly no right of the defendant was affected in the trial of the action now before us because of the fact that the pleadings were not confined, in an incidental particular, to the exact limit of time. The cause of action was stated with sufficient certainty in the complaint; the only claim made was alleged to have matured on or about the thirteenth day of September, and the action was not commenced until the sixteenth, and the fact that the plaintiff alleged that the services were rendered between certain dates, extending to a time after the service of the summons, is of no importance. In such a case the objection, which is in the nature of a demurrer, cannot be sustained unless it appears, admitting all the facts alleged, that no cause of action whatever is stated. The demurrer cannot be sustained simply by showing that facts are imperfectly or informally averred, or that the pleading lacks definiteness and precision, or that material facts are only argumentatively averred. The pleading may be deficient in technical language or in logical statement, but, as against a demurrer or a motion of this character at the trial, the pleading will be deemed to allege whatever can be implied from its statements by fair and reasonable intendment. ( Kain v. Larkin, 141 N.Y. 144, 150, and authorities cited at p. 151.)
Defendant's attorney appears to have a profound conviction that under the rule laid down in Whitehead v. Kennedy ( 69 N.Y. 462, 466) his client has been deprived of some right upon the trial of this action, but we are unable to find any reason for holding that this is a case to come within that most wholesome rule. The rule is that an attorney who, in dealing with his client, seeks to avail himself of the benefits of a contract, is bound to establish affirmatively that the contract was made by the client with full knowledge of all of the material circumstances known to the attorney, and was in every respect free from fraud on his part, or misconception on the part of the client, and that a reasonable use was made by the attorney of the confidence reposed in him. But in the case now before us there was no relation of attorney and client in the making of the contract sued upon; that contract was one of employment. The defendant went to Mr. Jones to employ him to bring two actions for slander. He was told, according to the plaintiff's version, which has been accepted by the jury as the true one, that Mr. Jones would undertake these actions at $150 each, and he accepted these terms. This was simply a bargain between individuals standing upon an equal footing, where the attorney had no possible advantage over the defendant, and where the latter was as fully in possession of all the facts and circumstances as Mr. Jones could be, and to hold that the plaintiff was bound to show that in this simple contract of employment his assignor had entered into a detailed explanation of all of the contingencies which might surround the causes of action which the defendant desired to assert, is absurd, and not within the contemplation of the rule. Reason is the soul of law, and when the reason of any particular law ceases, so does the law itself. (Broom Leg. Max. [7th ed.] 126.) If the plaintiff's assignor had, after entering into the relation of attorney for the defendant, made a contract with the latter in respect to some matter growing out of the new relation, the cases would be within the rule, but under the circumstances disclosed by the evidence the plaintiff was called upon merely to establish his case to the satisfaction of the jury, and this he has done.
It does not seem to be necessary to follow this case farther; we have examined the questions presented and we do not find error. The judgment should not, therefore, be disturbed.
The judgment and order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
All concurred.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.