170 Ga. 440 | Ga. | 1930
On November 21, 1928, Dunson and others filed a creditors’ bill against Howard. Temporary receivers were appointed to take charge of the property of the defendant, as prayed. On the same day and a few minutes after the filing of the above suit, Brown and others filed a creditors’ bill against Howard; and the court appointed the same persons as temporary receivers. On December 13, 1928, the court in the first of these cases appointed the same persons permanent receivers of the property of the defendant. On January 12, 1929, all parties consenting, the above suits were consolidated. Afterwards Tester M. Ownby, who represented the complainants in the second suit, filed in the consolidated case his application for fees for services rendered in bringing into court the funds arising from the sale of the assets of the insolvent debtor. He prayed for the allowance of reasonable compensation for such services. Ownby employed Barge, a fellow attorney at law, to aid and represent him in securing the compensation sought. Ownby agreed to allow Barge one half of any amount which the court would allow him as compensation for such services. This application finally came on to be heard before Judge Pomeroy,' one of the judges of the superior court of Fulton County, and Barge announced ready for the applicant. While waiting for the case to be reached in its order for trial, Ownby approached Barge and asked him hów much his fee would be if the matter was settled by consent. Barge stated that he would accept $50 if an agreement was reached and an order taken by consent. Boy S. Drennan was the attorney for the receivers. Thereupon Ownby and Drennan presented to the judge in chambers a consent order directing the receivers to pay to Ownby for the above services the sum of $250. Barge called upon Ownby and Drennan several times'for the money due him, and for the papers filed by Ownby and the order thereon allowing attorney^ fees, but'has never been able to get them, Ownby stating to him that Drennan had retained the amount of money due him and had promised to take care of his fee out of the amount so retained by him. Barge has not been paid the amount‘due him or any part thereof, although he has given considerable time in endeavoring to get such amount.
Barge intervened in the creditors’ consolidated case, and prayed
Attorneys at law have liens “DpOn suits, judgments and decrees
The only serious question is, what was Barge’s remedy to get his portion of the compensation which was given to Ownby for services rendered in the creditors’ suit. Ownby as an attorney instituted for his client the creditors’ bill. This alone would not make Ownby a party to the case, and alone would not subject him to an independent rule by Barge for the recovery of his portion of the funds awarded Ownby for services rendered in bringing the same into court in the creditors’ bill. But Ownby became a party by intervention to the creditors’ bill. In his intervention he prayed for compensation for services rendered as an attorney in bringing in funds for the benefit of the creditors of the insolvent debtor. He was represented in this suit by Barge as his attorney; and Barge by virtue of his employment and the rendition of services in pursuance of his employment obtained a lien upon the fruits of his skill and labor as such attorney, amounting to one half of the recovery, as he alleges in his intervention in which he sought to have awarded to him his portion of the compensation awarded by the court to Ownby for his services. The creditors’ bill was still pending, according to the allegations contained in Barge’s intervention. Ownby had become a party to this suit by his intervention. Barge like
Applying the above principles, Barge was entitled’ to a lien upon the judgment allowing Ownby compensation for services rendered in bringing in funds in the creditors’ bill for the benefit of creditors of the insolvent debtor, under the facts set up in the intervention filed by him; and he would further be entitled to a judgment setting up and establishing his lien upon such judgment and the proceeds thereof. If the check given by the receiver to Ownby for the compensation awarded him had not been paid when Barge’s’ proceeding was commenced, the court could r’estraih the payment thereof until Barge’s compensation was fixed and paid. If the check had been collected by Ownby, then the court by proper order could require him to pay to Barge the compensation found to be due him for representing Ownby in his application for such compensation. This the court can do under the broad power conferred upon the courts of this State “To control, in furtherance of justice, the conduct of its officers and all other persons connected with a judicial proceeding before it, in every matter appertaining’ thereto.” Civil Code (1910), § 4644.' It follows that the judge erred in dismissing the intervention of Barge on the ground that it was without jurisdiction to entertain it.
.Judgment reversed,