This case was originally commenced in the district court of Fremont County on March 20, 1917, by the above named plaintiff, Allith-Prouty Company, a Corporation, appellant herein, against Jennie V. Wallace, defendant below and respondent here. The petition alleges that plaintiff is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the state *Page 396 of Illinois and is the successor of the Allith Manufacturing Company, which latter corporation was duly dissolved about the first day of January, 1913, and absorbed into and by the plaintiff company. That the defendant was the owner of sixty shares of the capital stock of said Allith Manufacturing Company, of the par value of $100, making a total valuation of $6000. That on March 25, 1911, a motion was duly made and carried whereby the board of directors of said Allith-Manufacturing Company declared a dividend of 100%, making a total amount of $6000 declared for the defendant. That thereafter, on the first day of April, said dividend was paid to said stockholders of said corporation, of which $6000 was paid to the defendant. That said dividend was paid in the form of an additional issue of capital stock in the Allith Manufacturing Company, so that the defendant received sixty additional shares, making a total of one hundred and twenty shares of stock held by her. That thereafter, on or about April 1, 1915, it was discovered that an error in calculation had been made by the board of directors of said Allith Manufacturing Company, in declaring said 100% dividend, making it necessary for the board of directors of said plaintiff company to cancel and annul the said former dividend to the extent of forty percent on each share of the stock, leaving the amount that had been correctly paid as dividend only sixty percent thereof. That on account of said error it became necessary to order a refund to the corporation of forty percent of the stock so issued as dividend, which was accordingly done, and that all of the stockholders of said corporation, with the exception of defendant and her husband, made such refund. That a demand for such refund had been made upon defendant, but that she has refused to make the same and that there is due to plaintiff by reason thereof the sum of $2400 and interest.
The defendant was a non-resident of the state of Wyoming at the time of the commencement of the action, and jurisdiction in the case was obtained by an attachment issued *Page 397 in said cause, an affidavit having been duly filed that the defendant was a non-resident of the state of Wyoming. Certain property in the town of Lander was attached. The only notice of said action served upon the defendant was by publication, as by law provided, although a copy of the notice did not reach the defendant. The case was tried in the absence of the defendant, and a judgment was rendered therein on December 8, 1917, in favor of the plaintiff for $3686.93 and costs. An execution was duly issued and the property in the city of Lander attached in the case was duly sold to H.C. Smith for the benefit of the plaintiff herein, which sale was subsequently, on June 16, 1919, duly confirmed by the court.
On August 23, 1919, the defendant herein served notice upon the plaintiff of an intended application to re-open, vacate and set aside the foregoing judgment and orders of the court. An application to that effect was filed on September 3, 1919, and an order was entered in said court on September 29, 1919, granting the application and authorizing the defendant to appear and defend. On the same day, the defendant filed an answer and cross-petition in said case, denying the allegations of the plaintiff's petition and asking damages by way of counter-claim for the wrongful attachment issued in said cause, and also a judgment for the value of the stock dividend heretofore mentioned but not turned over to the defendant.
Said cause came on for hearing before said court on December 8, 1922, and the court found in favor of the defendant and against the plaintiff and appellant, and rendered judgment in favor of said defendant and respondent in the sum of $9304.00 and costs. On December 18th, 1922, said plaintiff filed a motion for a new trial and to have said cause re-opened, which said motion was granted on January 3, 1923, upon certain conditions hereinafter mentioned. Said cause came on again for trial on February 21, 1923, before the court without a jury, at the close of which the court again found in favor of said defendant and against the *Page 398 plaintiff, and rendered judgment for the defendant in the sum of $10,732.00 and costs. From this judgment the plaintiff has appealed to this court. The parties will herein be referred to in the same manner as in the court below.
1. The undisputed testimony shows that defendant owned sixty shares in the Allith Manufacturing Company at the time that the stock dividend above referred to was declared. That was on March 25, 1911. The motion to declare said dividend was made by Wm. A. Wallace, husband of defendant, who was a director in said company, and who himself owned six shares of stock therein. The dividend stock was, however, never delivered to the defendant. During the year 1911, the plaintiff company took over the property and assets of the Allith Manufacturing Company. About the beginning of the year 1912 negotiations began between H.C. Smith, president of the consolidated company, and Wm. A. Wallace for the purchase of the stock held by the latter and his wife, and the sale of the stock, namely, sixty-six shares of the Allith Manufacturing Company was soon thereafter actually effected, being made to Charles C. Linthicum for $13,200, or $200 per share. Linthicum caused the stock to be transferred to him on the books of the company, and the dividend stock heretofore mentioned, which otherwise would or should have been issued to defendant and her husband, was issued to said Linthicum by reason of the purchase aforesaid.
The trial court included in the judgment in the case at bar the sum of $3600 for 60% of the $6000 dividend stock not issued to defendant, but issued, as stated, to Linthicum instead, and also included in said judgment the sum of $1470 for dividends earned thereon to the time of the trial, making a total of $5070 so included by reason of said dividend stock. This amount was evidently allowed upon the theory that the plaintiff converted this stock, although no such issue was raised by the pleadings. Waiving that point, however, we must examine whether or not the evidence in the record justified the finding. H.C. Smith testified that *Page 399 when the sale to Linthicum of the sixty shares of defendant and the six shares of Wm. A. Wallace was made, the defendant sold all of her interest in the Allith Manufacturing Company, including the 100% dividend that had been declared. The trial court held that this dividend was not included in the sale and was doubtless led to this conclusion largely by reason of what it conceived to be the limited authority of the power of attorney given by defendant to her husband William A. Wallace. That instrument is in the usual form and gives power to "assign and transfer the following shares of the capital stock of the Allith Manufacturing Company, to-wit: (here specifying Nos. 184-189 both inclusive) to Charles C. Linthicum of Chicago, Illinois, at such prices and on such terms as my said attorney may determine" etc. We do not, however, think that the authority of Wm. A. Wallace should be necessarily limited by the power of attorney, for the reason that it is clear that it was given not for the purpose of negotiating the sale of the stock but simply for the purpose of properly effecting the transfer of the stock on the books of the corporation. This appears clearly from the testimony of Mr. Wallace as follows:
"Mr. Smith began negotiating to buy my stock, and my wife's, sometime prior to this, and finally he offered me a price of $200 a share. I advised my wife to take it and accepted his offer. He came to me and told me he was ready to close the deal and took me up to Mr. Linthicum's office and left me standing in the anteroom while he went and talked to Mr. Linthicum. Finally he motioned for me to come in. I went in. While Mr. Linthicum was making out his check, he says, `I think I ought to have a power of attorney for Mrs. Wallace.' I says, `All right.' They made out the power of attorney and there was nothing further said. I figured that they knew more about the affairs of the company than I did and I made no further comment." *Page 400
What, then, was the actual authority of Mr. Wallace, and what was the intention when the sale was made? Unfortunately, Mr. Linthicum is dead and his version of the transaction was not available. Without going into the details of the testimony of Mrs. Wallace, we think that it clearly appears therefrom that she relied exclusively upon her husband and left the whole transaction unconditionally and unqualifiedly to him and that he had ample authority to do whatever he thought advisable in order to effect the transfer of her interest in the Allith Manufacturing Company. It further appears from her testimony that she and her husband were moving away from Illinois to California. "Well," she testified, "We were going away and we sold our stock, that's all I know about it — we were going to California and we sold the stock. * * * We were settling our affairs and we sold everything we had." Hence it is clearly apparent that there was no thought in her mind that she was retaining any interest in said corporation. Mr. Wallace, it is true, denied that he transacted any business for his wife other than the sale of the shares of stock. It is accordingly contended by counsel for defendant that a conflict of evidence appears which this court will not review. The conflict is, however, more apparent than real. Mr. Wallace, when asked if he was still a stockholder in the corporation, answered: "No, sir. * * * I sold all the common stock I had. * * * I didn't want to act (as director) after I sold my common stock." He had some preferred stock and also sold that, bearing out the testimony of Mrs. Wallace that she and her husband were selling out everything in order to move to California. He further testified that the stock which he sold was worth $200 per share, and that this value was based upon the "earnings, dividends, and market price." The only dividend referred to was the dividend of 100% here in dispute. By this testimony he corroborated E.A. Biggs, who also testified that $200 was the value of the stock, inclusive of the dividend of 100%. The price for which the stock was in fact sold was $200 per *Page 401 share, and shows conclusively that the dividend of 100% was intended to be included in fixing the price. This conclusion is also borne out by the fact that while, as stated, Mr. Wallace himself made the motion to have the dividend of 100% declared, neither he nor his wife, for a period of some eight or nine years, ever made any inquiry in regard to it or demanded that any stock be issued to them. The most that can be made out of the testimony of Mr. Wallace is when he testified that "the dividend stock was never mentioned at any time in the negotiations for this stock." Even if that were true, it is perfectly apparent that the price fixed and paid for the stock included payment for such "dividend stock" and the inclusion of the latter in the sale was clearly in the minds of the parties during the transaction. In view of that fact the absence of an express mention thereof cannot be made the basis of perpetrating an injustice. The judgment of the trial court cannot, accordingly, be upheld on this point.
2. The court also allowed the sum of $3600 for the value of the property sold under the attachment, and the interest thereon from the time of the sale. The authorities are conflicting as to whether or not a counterclaim could have properly been filed in the main action for the purpose of recovery of damages. 6 C.J. 505, 506. But no objection to the procedure was made in the court below, nor is it made here, and we cannot consider that point, and hence the question as to whether or not the items above mentioned were rightly allowed depends on whether or not the attachment was properly or improperly issued. The answer thereto does not, of course, as seems to be contended, depend solely on whether it is true or not that the defendant was a non-resident of the State of Wyoming. In addition to the statutory grounds authorizing an attachment, or rather as a necessary basis for it, there must be an indebtedness. Without such indebtedness there can be no rightful attachment. 6 C.J. 500; McGill v. W.P. Fuller Co., 45 Wash. 615; 88 P. 1038; Ames v. Chirurg, 152 Iowa, 278, 132 N.E. 427; 38 *Page 402 L.R.A.N.S. 120; Comer v. Powell (Tex.Civ.App.) 189 S.W. 88. The court found, in the case at bar, that no such indebtedness owing from defendant to plaintiff existed. We have looked in vain through the briefs of counsel for plaintiff for any theory under which Mrs. Wallace is thought to be legally indebted to plaintiff in the action brought against her. The petition alleges that a dividend of $6000 was paid to defendant. But there is no proof of that allegation. On the contrary, it clearly appears that the dividend so referred to was paid to Linthicum and not to Mrs. Wallace. We cannot see how an overpayment made by the plaintiff to the former could be recovered from the latter. It follows accordingly that the attachment was issued wrongfully and that the foregoing items were properly allowed by the court.
3. The court also allowed as damages to defendant the sum of $1000 for attorneys' fees. The only contention made is that the amount was allowed for contesting the merits of the case and not for having the attachment dissolved; that this cannot lawfully be done, and that hence no part of the fees should have been allowed. The evidence in the case is not altogther specific or clear for just what services the fee was claimed or allowed, but inasmuch as it is not contended that the amount is excessive, if any was properly allowed, we need but to inquire as to whether or not any attorney fee may be recovered in a case of this kind at all. Some authorities hold that such fees may not be recovered in an action for wrongful attachment, unless the bond or the statute specifically provide therefor, because the incurrence thereof is not the natural and direct consequence of the attachment. 6 C.J. 543. We do not, however, perceive the force of such reasoning. It is practically impossible, or at least exceedingly difficult, for a person to protect his legal rights in this commercial age without the employment of an attorney. It is only in rare instances that such assistance is not sought. This is a fact known to everyone, and every attaching creditor realizes when he procures *Page 403 a writ of attachment to be issued, that the defendant must and will incur the expense of attorneys' fees, if any defense exists to the action or to the grounds of the attachment. An attachment writ is an extraordinary process, often causes great damages, and is designed, ordinarily, for the purpose of being used sparingly only. Hence it is the general rule, based, we think, upon the sounder reasoning, that one against whom an attachment has been wrongfully sued out is entitled to recover reasonable counsel fees incurred or expended in defending against such attachment. 6 C.J. 543. Generally the actions for the recovery of such fees have been upon the attachment bond which usually provides, as is required of the bond mentioned in section 6119, W.C.S. 1920, that the plaintiff will pay all damages which the defendant may sustain by reason of the wrongful attachment. The "damages" however, sustained, would seem to be no different whether the action to recover them be upon the bond or in a common law action for wrongful attachment or by way of counterclaim. Fleming v. Bailey, 44 Miss. 132; Marqueze v. Sontheimer, 59 Miss. 430; Dunlap v. Fox (Miss.) 2 So. 169; Selz v. Belden,48 Iowa 451. The allowance for attorneys' fees should, of course, generally be limited to fees for services in connection with the dissolution of the attachment itself, and no allowance should be made for fees for services in defending the principal action. 6 C.J. 544. But in the case at bar jurisdiction in the case was only obtained by the attachment. The ground alleged therefor was that the defendant was a non-resident. This was true, and the only way by which the defendant was enabled to have the attachment dissolved was by defending the whole case upon its merits and thus showing that the plaintiff had no cause of action. There is a difference of opinion among the courts as to whether or not attorneys fees are recoverable under such a state of facts. It is held by some of them that where it is impossible to differentiate between the attorney's services for dissolving the attachment and those for defending the suit, such attorneys' *Page 404 fees should not be allowed, for to do so would be to allow the fees virtually for defending the suit on the merits. Fariss v. Swift (La.) 99 So. 893; Three Rivers Oil Co. v. Laurence, 153 La. 224, 95 So. 652; Vannatta v. Vannatta, 55 S.W. 685, 21 Ky. L. Rep. 1464; Frost v. Jordan, 37 Minn. 544; 36 N.W. 713; See Ames v. Chirurg,152 Iowa, 278, 132 N.W. 427, 38 L.R.A.N.S. 120. Other cases, however, take the contrary view. Moseby v. Fidelity Dep. Co., 33 Idaho 37 189 P. 862; 25 A.L.R. 564; Buckley v. Van Diver, 70 Miss. 622, 12 So. 905; State v. Yount, 186 Mo. App. 258; 172 S.W. 431; State v. McHale, 16 Mo. App. 478; Straschitz v. Ungar, 153 N.Y.S. 118; Balinsky v. Gross, 72 Misc. Rep. 7,128 N YS. 1062; Tyng v. American Surety Co.,69 A.D. 137, 74 N YS. 502. The point involved is governed, we think, by the case of Littleton et al. v. Burgess, 16 Wyo. 58, 91 P. 832, 16 L.R.A. (N.S.) 49 where it was held that attorneys' fees incurred in procuring the dissolution of a temporary writ of injunction are recoverable in an action on the bond where an injunction is the object of the suit. In such a case it is necessary to defend the action upon its merits in order to procure the dissolution of the writ in like manner as in the case at bar, and it would seem that the holding should be the same in both cases. We are, therefore, constrained to hold that the trial court committed no error in allowing the foregoing item.
4. After a judgment had been rendered against the plaintiff and in favor of defendant on December 8, 1922, subsequent to the first reopening of the case, the plaintiff moved to have the case reopened and to have a new trial granted. This motion was granted on January 3, 1923, upon condition that the plaintiff deposit the sum of $500 for the purpose of paying the expenses to be incurred by defendant in the further trial of the cause. The plaintiff made no objection to said condition and deposited said money as directed. It was not shown that defendant personally incurred any such expenses, but William A. Wallace, *Page 405 her husband, testified that his expenses in attending the trial amounted to over $400. The court allowed him the sum of $295 out of said deposit of $500 for such expenses. The plaintiff complains of this, claiming that only the expenses of defendant herself and not those of her husband were contemplated in the foregoing order. We do not think the objection well taken. It is apparent that William A. Wallace acted as defendant's agent, and represented her at the trial. The judge who made said order, and who also tried this case, stated during the trial, when Wm. A. Wallace testified to his expenses, that plaintiff had agreed to pay the former's expenses; or in other words that it was contemplated at the time said order was made that Wm. A. Wallace would represent defendant. We think that the latter's expenses should, under the circumstances, be considered as the expenses of defendant.
This disposes of all the errors assigned except that which complains of setting aside the original judgment in favor of plaintiff. We do not think that the court erred in that regard. It is a sufficient answer to say that when plaintiff itself moved on December 18, 1922 to have the case reopened and have it tried anew, and when that motion was granted and a full trial had thereafter, whatever error in that respect might have been committed previously was cured. It is accordingly ordered that this case be and the same is hereby remanded to the district court with directions to reduce the judgment herein entered from the sum of $10,732.00 to the sum of $5662.00, as of date February 24, 1923, and that the judgment as so modified be and the same is hereby affirmed. The costs in this court will be equally divided between the parties hereto.
Modified and Affirmed.
POTTER, Ch. J., and RINER, District Judge, concur. *Page 406