18 Pa. Super. 110 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1901
Opinion by
On June 16,1898, Aber obtained judgment for costs, amounting to $188.42, against Schnuth. On March 20,1899, Schnuth obtained judgment on verdict against Aber for $327.28. On December 20, 1898, the day before the verdict was rendered in the last mentioned case, Schnuth assigned the verdict and judgment to his attorneys, these appellees, in consideration of services rendered and money expended by them in his behalf in this and other cases. Subsequently, upon the petition of Aber, a rule was granted on Schnuth and his attorneys to show cause why his, Aber’s, judgment should not be set off against
1. It is urged, in the first place, that, as the petition in such a matter is addressed to the discretion of the court, its refusal to allow the set-off is not reviewable by this court. The practice of setting off one judgment against another was originally adopted by the common-law courts because it was deemed inequitable that the process of the court should be used for the collection of a debt when the creditor owed his debtor a like, greater or less sum evidenced also by the records of the court. Judges of learning and ability have expressed the opinion that under our defalcation act, it is a legal as well as an equitable right, but the doctrine most generally accepted is that “ judgments are set against each other, not by force of the statute, but by the inherent powers of the courts immemorially exercised, being almost the only equitable jurisdiction originally appertaining to them as courts of law: ” Ramsey’s Appeal, 2 W. 228. The exercise of this power, whilst discretionary, is not a mere matter of grace, but is governed by equitable principles. The right of the defendant, although not secured by statute, cannot be arbitrarily denied: Skinner v. Chase, 6 Pa. Superior Ct. 279. This equity, as has been said elsewhere, is founded in system, and does not rest upon capricious or arbitrary discretion. It was held in some of the earlier cases, it is true, that a writ of error would not lie to such proceeding, but in Horton v. Miller, 44 Pa. 256, it was distinctly ruled that the proper mode of review was by appeal. In that case a writ of error had been taken which was changed into an appeal, concerning which Justice Thompson said: “ A writ of error in such a case would only bring up the judgment in which error was alleged, but not the petition on which the appelation was founded nor the testimony; it was therefore necessary and proper, as it was a case in equity, to change it into an appeal.”
2. It is urged, in the second place, that the equitable right of the respondents, by virtue of the assignment to them, is
3. It is urged, further, that if the assignment is not sufficient, of itself, to protect the appellees, a set-off will not be permitted to the prejudice of an attorney’s lien for services rendered in obtaining the judgment, and that upon this ground the rule was properly discharged. As a general rule an attorney
The order discharging the rule to show cause is reversed, the rule is reinstated and made absolute, and the record is remitted to the court below with directions to carry this order into effect; the costs of this appeal to be paid by the appellees.