55 N.Y.S. 721 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1898
A fund, representing the proceeds of a judgment obtained by the corporation-defendant against one Schwabeland, having been paid into the receiver’s hands subject to the lien of the attorney for the corporation, it was referred to a referee to take proof and report upon the amount of this lien, and the referee has found that the attorney, La Fetra, is entitled to a sum representing 40 per cent, of the recovery in that action together with $61.70 for disbursements actually and necessarily incurred in the course of the litigation. The issue of the agreement, under which this 40 per cent, was claimed, depended upon the conflicting testimony of the witnesses called for either side, and the referee’s finding in favor of the petitioner, upon this head, is supported by the evidence which he found the more credible, after personally observing the witnesses. I cannot say that this result is against the weight of the evidence, and the conclusion should, therefore, remain undisturbed. The referee was also justified in allowing the item of $61.70 for actual disbursements, since the -agreement by which the extent of the lien is to be measured, covered the attorney’s disbursements, and provided for their satisfaction, and the fact that these particular disbursements were not taxable, as against the judgment debtor, does not affect the force of the agreement, as between the attorney and his client, that the expenditure should be made good from the proceeds of the judgment. It is also claimed by the receiver that the petitioner was erroneously allowed interest upon the 40 per cent, share of the fund to the date of the proceeding, but examination discloses the fact that the amount allowed is excessive by only a few cents of 40 per cent, of the sum paid to the receiver as due upon the verdict. The referee adopted the computation which had been accepted by the parties upon the hearing, and the receiver’s exception raises no substantial question. Again, it is contended that the receiver’s alleged set-off of the value of certain wines, delivered by the corporation to the petitioner, should have been taken as established, but the evidence has led the referee to find that these wines were the subject of a gift to the petitioner, and the probabilities do not oppose the fact. The petitioner has excepted to so much of the referee’s report as denies him a lien against the fund for services rendered, generally, as attorney, at the request of the corporation, but not in the action in which the judgment was obtained, the contention being that a general lien upon these moneys existed. I think that the referee’s conclusion upon this point was quite correct, since, while it might be, under
Report confirmed; motion upon supplemental report dismissed; petitioner to have $10' motion costs and allowance of $390 for rc-feree’s fees.
Ordered accordingly.