The premiere episode for Dundee and the Culhane! We are introduced to the main characters Dundee, and The Culhane, and learn a little about their lives! The two men travel to Friends’ Meeting, the once-peaceful Quaker community where outlaw Royal Bodie and his gang are extorting money for water and ‘“protection” of the farmers’ crops. When Bodie is killed, the gang delivers an ultimatum: Turn over the killer or watch the town burn.
Dundee and The Culhane travel to Mexico and meet up with Mexican Bandits along the way!
Dundee urges the people of a small town to stand up to tyrannical Zack Carson. To prove it can be done, Dundee defends an unusual client: a horse accused of killing Zack's son.
An army fort under Indian attack provides Dundee with the opportunity to re-open a murder trial he has already lost.
More than one life is at stake as Dundee defends a client accused of murdering his own son. A bandit chieftain has sworn to wipe out the town if Dundee's client goes free.
Dundee goes 1000 feet below ground to defend a mine owner whose men blame him for the death of seven miners. The proceeding is a grim ordeal for the lawyer, who once spent eight hours trapped in a cave-in.
A rowdy hour rife with double-takes and plot twists: Dundee takes the case of a gentleman duelist being sued for $50,000, by his victim's wet-eyed widow. The lawyer's first mistake is thinking that he can prove the widow isn't a widow.
Dundee is expected at a lunch at 3:10, but his guest never arrives. This has Dundee and The Culhane worried, so they go out looking for him!
Lawyers Dundee and the Culhane square off in a kangaroo court presided over by an old Indian chief. Dundee is the prosecutor as Culhane defends a prospector.
Dundee learns the truth about his minister brother. He learns that he, while vowing to be a man of God, he is a killer!
Dundee must defend a woman in court who is upset over her neighbour's destruction of the mysterious weed formations in her front yard!
Culhane and bounty hunter Ben Murcheson chase a thief who pretended an interest in the banker's daughter—and got away with $175,000 from the bank's safe.