dissenting.
It is well established that if two or moré lawyers jointly undertake to represent a client the fee is shared equally in the absence of an agreement to the contrary. The law implies an;.agreement for an equal division *45of the fee. The presumption of an equal sharing maybe overcome by evidence showing a contrary intent. We must determine whether the plaintiff, aided by this presumption, has carried his burden of proof. I am of the opinion that he has not done so in this case. Much of the testimony is in direct conflict. Most of it comes from witnesses who are either directly or indirectly interested in the outcome of the case. There is no doubt that John Carson performed substantial legal services in connection with the litigation which produced the fee in question. These services could have been rendered either as a joint adventurer with L. H. McMahan or as one employed to perform legal services for another. In the ordinary case, when two lawyers are engaged in the prosecution of a law suit, they usually share the fee equally. The presumption alluded to above gives recognition to this customary practice and effects an equal division of the fee unless there is sufficient evidence to show that the parties intended some other division of the fee or method of compensation. But it is not uncommon for one lawyer to employ another lawyer under an agreement calling for the payment of a fee based upon a per-hour or per-diem basis. And occasionally it is agreed that payment shall be made upon the basis of the reasonable value of the services, the final determination of the compensation being postponed until the case is concluded.
The arrangement entered into between Carson and McMahan in the present case was not the usual one referred to above. At the time Carson was brought into the case McMahan had already performed for his client, Katherine Pettingill, legal services in the lawsuit which yielded the fee, these services including the filing of a complaint in intervention and a reply to *46the answer to that complaint. More important than this, however, was the fact that McMahan paid to Carson from time to time during the course of the litigation various sums of money, totalling at least $834.00, as legal fees. It should be noted also that in the early stages of the lawsuit the prospective fee would be approximately $7,500. It was also established that McMahan paid the expenses of litigation amounting to $552.20. Although the expert witnesses (two former presidents of the Oregon State Bar) called by the plaintiff testified that it was not uncommon for one attorney to advance the expenses of litigation in a joint adventure, they stated that the payment of fees by one attorney to another attorney in the manner McMahan paid Carson would be a most unusual procedure for persons engaged in a joint adventure.
The evidence introduced in support of Carson’s claim may be summarized as follows: Myrtle Carson, John Carson’s widow, testified that he had worked many hours on the Pettingill case; that the case seemed very important to him; that he had described it as the biggest ease he had ever had; that he expected it would be the largest fee that he had ever had out of a lawsuit ; that he discussed the case over the telephone with McMahan quite often; that he made several trips to Boseburg concerning the ease; that Carson told her that “there would be enough out of this case to take care of” her; that after the case was argued before the Oregon Supreme Court he called the clerk from time to time to find out what decision was reached by the Court; that after that decision was rendered he held a conference with McMahan and that before leaving for that conference he told his wife that he was going to discuss the fee with McMahan; that McMahan had called her on numerous occasions attempting to *47get her to drop the case against Tiim. Carson’s brothers, with whom he shared law offices, testified that Mc-Mahan was frequently in Carson’s office; that Mc-Mahan had said, “Johnny and I are going to get a god damn good fee out of this case”; that after the decision in that case was rendered by this Court Carson asked one of his brothers what a reasonable division of the fee should be, indicating that he felt that fifty per cent would be reasonable; that Carson had said on one occasion that he expected a fee in excess of $30,000. One of Carson’s brothers also testified that McMahan had made a threat that if Mrs. Carson did not drop the lawsuit that he would be obliged to divulge matters which would be injurious to the Carson family. It is undisputed that Carson was unassisted in the trial of the ease, which lasted one day, and that he argued the ease on appeal. Although there was a conflict of testimony as to the relative amount of work McMahan and Carson contributed in the preparation for trial and in the preparation of the brief, it seems clear that Carson did a substantial amount of the work.
The evidence in support of McMahan’s position was as follows: As already indicated, McMahan paid Carson fees totalling the sum of $834 by several checks, and according to McMahan’s testimony, an additional amount in cash, which together with the checks, would total $1,000. McMahan paid $552.20 as expenses of litigation. McMahan had performed legal services in connection with the case before Carson was called upon to assist him. McMahan had employed another attorney to help him with the case before he employed Carson. McMahan’s son testified that his father was first interested in the case in 1949 or 1950; that Mc-Mahan had spent. considerable time in the Oregon *48Supreme Court library and in John Carson’s office library working on the brief after the circuit court decision; that McMahan had made four or five trips to Roseburg in connection with the case; that after the case was decided by the Supreme Court McMahan got the file from Carson and without Carson’s assistance did further work on the case, particularly in connection with the sale of the property involved in the suit; that his father had told him that Carson had been paid in full; that his father had few assets at the time he was paying the expenses of litigation and the fees to Carson; that his father worried about what he would be able to leave to his widow upon his death. McMahan’s deposition was taken at a time when he was obviously ill and very probably senile. It is quite apparent that his memory was affected. He testified that because his hearing was bad he had hired Carson to try the case; he did not remember the basis upon which he hired him; that he had paid Carson $1,000 in checks and cash; that “he paid him what it was—, paid him just as if you hired any man, to pay him”; that just before Carson died McMahan went to Carson’s office. McMahan’s testimony concerning this visit was as follows:
“A * * * I went v. to the office just to see bim and he wasn’t looking very well. I think that was four or five days before he took down sick and I thought that John * * * had spent his money. As he had been a playmate of my boy who died, I was interested in him more than anybody else, almost, and he was sitting across the table from me, and when I got v. he was looking depressed, very much. That was on account of the sickness, really, that was coming on him. I wrote him out a check for a hundred dollars and put it over to him and he looked at it and then put it over on the other side and said, ‘You don’t owe me anything, Mac. You know you paid me all that you owe *49me for all the work I have ever done for yon.’ I said, ‘Never mind, John, yon cash it.’ And I went on out and left him. And then when he left it— he left it there, and then three or four days after that he had that sickness and after he died they found this check on the table and John’s wife cashed the check, but that was after John had been buried.”
McMahan testified on cross-examination that “my recollection of that is that the girls signed that other check. I think Myrtle [John Carson’s widow] signed it.” Further testimony concerning this episode was as follows:
“Q That check was for a hundred dollars ?
“A Yes.
“Q Is that the check?
“A No.
“Q Haven’t you got the check here ?
“A Wait a moment. Well, this may be it, but I thought the girls endorsed that other check. The girls endorsed it on that, it seemed to me. I am not certain about it.
“Q I am just wondering, is that about the right time?
“A Well, what is this, in ’55 ?
“Q I think you have got it before you there.
“A In ’55 and this is what—this is ’55.
“Q That check is ’55, isn’t it, and this is ’56 we are in. Is that the check or can you tell?
“A I can’t tell. I can’t tell.
“Q Well, would you know, if this isn’t the check, have you got another check someplace?
“A I don’t know. I never keep my checks. I don’t keep books even. Never did.
*****
“Q Just a minute. We don’t quite understand this check here.
“A Huh?
*50“Q We don’t quite understand that cheek, whether that is the check that you talked about leaving there on the table or not.
“A Well, how could I tell; I don’t know any more about it than you do, Walt.
“Q That isn’t very much.
“A But I don’t believe it is. I will tell you why. My recollection of that is that the girls signed that other check. I think Myrtle signed it and—
“Q Do you know why you haven’t got that other check here?
“A Why I haven’t got it?
“Q Yes.
“A No, I never had any of those checks. Where did you get them?
“Q Your attorney produced them here in evidence a while ago.
“A Ch. those were the ones they found down at the house.
“Q I don’t know where they found them.
“A I was confused in regard to that, and I don’t know anything about it.
“Q Now, you are sure, are you, that the last day you were v. there you left him a check for a hundred dollars? That is just a few days—
“A That was the last time I saw him, yes. He was sick and he wouldn’t take it. He looked like he was sick and I left it to him and they found it after he died. They found it where he had thrown it over here and left it on the table.
“Q How do you know how they found it?
“A Well, that is what they said, it was found that way.
“Q Somebody told you that?
“A I think Myrtle told me about it, I am not certain.
*51“Q And you think she cashed it? You think she cashed that cheek?
“A Why, yes. I think Myrtle got it. Is she here now?
“Q Yes she is back there.
“A Myrtle—
“Q Mac, they are going to take her deposition in just a little bit, then she can speak for herself rattier than talking across the courtroom now. But your memory is, let’s get your memory of it then she can give her memory of it, your memory of it is that this isn’t the check that you gave him upon that occasion, that you gave him another one for a hundred dollars on that occasion, and that Myrtle cashed that other check?
“A Yes, that is my recollection of it, or remembrance of it, my recollection, because I had forgotten all about it, you know. But it seems to me that Myrtle’s name was—she cashed it after John died.”
Carson’s wife and brothers testified that they had never seen the $100 cheek. Neither the canceled cheek nor the bank photostat of it was introduced into evidence. Mrs. Carson’s name appears as an endorser on one of the checks which McMahan gave to Carson. It is possible that McMahan confused that check with the one he alleged was left with Carson. It is possible that his testimony with respect to the delivery of the check to Carson was entirely false.
The foregoing testimony, substantially all of which was given by persons interested in the outcome of the case, constituted the bulk of the evidence. The plaintiff introduced the deposition of the late Chief Justice Earl Latourette, in which he testified that after the case was at issue in the Supreme Court Mc-Mahan called upon him as Chief Justice to advance the *52Pettingill case on the docket, giving as his reason the following: “John [Carson] and I have a big fee tied np in this matter and I want to get my portion of it before I die.”
A letter written by Mr. Justice Kossman on October 1, 1957 addressed to counsel for plaintiff and defendant was admitted into evidence by stipulation. In this letter Mr. Justice Rossman referred to a conversation which he had with McMahan “possibly two or three years” prior to October 1, 1957, in which McMahan “mentioned a ease pending in the circuit court in which he was one of the attorneys and which involved some valuable timber. He told me that he had given the case attention for many years and presently added that John Carson was working with him upon the matter. I believe that he said that he (Judge Mc-Mahan) had hired Mr. Carson. I saw that he expected to receive a sizeable fee. * * *”
The only substantial testimony directly relating to the nature of the business relationship between Mc-Mahan and Carson, aside from that given by interested persons, was that of the Pettingills. It tends to support McMahan’s position. Katherine Pettingill’s son, who acted as his mother’s agent in connection with the litigation in which she intervened, testified that he met McMahan in 1950; that McMahan stated that on account of his hearing he would be unable to try the case and he asked permission to hire another attorney; that McMahan agreed to pay all the expenses of the trial; that McMahon had remarked numerous times that he had paid John.Carson in full. Florence Pettingill, Howard’s wife, testified that “at various times Judge McMahan stated that he was paying. John Carson as he went along.”. She also testified that after the decision of the Supreme Court had been handed down, *53Carson had asked her if there had been any written contract with McMahan with respect to attorney’s fees.
Much of the evidence in support of plaintiff’s case relates to the amount of work performed by Carson. The fact that Carson performed a substantial proportion of the work does not necessarily establish a partnership. A lawyer may be employed by another lawyer to do all of the work on a case for a stipulated fee or on the basis of the value of his services. Obviously such evidence is of prime importance if the theory of recovery is quantum meruit.
The foregoing is a fair review of the evidence. It is my opinion that the evidence adduced by the defendant was sufficient to rebut the implied agreement for an equal division of the fee although I do not feel that it was sufficient to establish the contrary proposition that McMahan had paid Carson in full and that Carson understood that he was paid in full. It is possible that Carson proceeded on the assumption that he would be paid the reasonable value of his services, whereas McMahan assumed that he was paying Carson as he went along. It is also possible that both parties understood that Carson would be paid the reasonable value of his services when the case was concluded, taking into account the fees already paid by McMahan. Whichever way it is viewed the evidence does not appear to point to an equal division of the fee with sufficient force to satisfy the burden of proof cast upon the plaintiff. That being so, I think that the case should be remanded to the trial court for the purpose of establishing the reasonable value of the legal services rendered by Carson. The trial judge stated that if this court should decide that an agreement for an equal division was not established he would find that the division would be equal on a quantum meruit basis. *54But there was not sufficient evidence introduced from which it could be determined that John Carson’s services were worth approximately $40,000. The value of Carson’s services should be proved. The majority of the court treats the defendant’s proposed finding No. V that Carson be paid an additional $10,000 for his services as a “judicial admission that Carson was something more than a ‘hired’ hand and that he had not been paid in full.” I do not so regard it. Counsel for the defendant submitted this finding after the court had rejected defendant’s contention that Carson had been paid in full. The proposed finding, if an admission of anything, was merely the recognition that at most Carson was entitled to recover on a quantum meruit basis. In my opinion that is the conclusion which this court should reach, and the case should be remanded to determine the reasonable value of John Carson’s services.