153 Ind. 371 | Ind. | 1899
By the order of the Howard Circuit Court, one Forgey, who was the plaintiff in a civil action pending m that court, was admitted to prosecute the same as a poor person, agreeably to the provisions of §260 R. S. 1881 and Horner 1897, §261 Burns 1894. The appellee, an attorney of that court, was assigned him to prosecute the suit. The appointment was accepted, and such professional services as were necessary in the action were performed by appellee. Afterwards, the court by its further order, allowed the appellee the sum of $100 as compensation for his services. A certified copy of this order was presented to the auditor of Howard county, and a warrant upon the treasurer of the county for the payment of the sum named in the order was demanded. The auditor refused to draw
The question presented is, did the appointment of the appellee by the Howard Circuit Court create a charge against the county, and was the order of the court allowing the appellee compensation for professional services rendered by him to a poor person, in a civil action, authorized by law.
The provision of the statute, under which the appointment of the appellee as such attorney was made, is found in the code of civil procedure only, §261 Burns 1894, §260 Horner 1897, and is in these words: “Any poor person, not having sufficient means to prosecute or defend an action, may apply to the court in which the action is intended to be brought, or is pending, for leave to prosecute or defend as a poor person. The court, if satisfied that such person has not sufficient means to prosecute or defend the action, shall admit the applicant to prosecute or defend as a poor person, and shall assign him an attorney to defend or prosecute the cause, and all other officers requisite for the prosecution or defense, who shall do their duty therein without taking any fee or reward therefor, from such poor person.”
An attorney at law cannot, in this State, be compelled by an order of a court to render professional services without compensation. In criminal cases, the defense of the poor and destitute is a necessary obligation devolving upon the county, and to 'the extent of providing counsel for them, the court is the agent of the county. An allowance for such services, made b.y the order of the court, is not conclusive upon the county, but is prima facie evidence only that the services were so rendered. The authority for such allowances is said, in some of the cases, to be found in sections two, three and four, 1 G. & H., p. 64, corresponding to §§1413, 1414 and
Hone of these cases, however, touches the questions presented- on this appeal. The appointments of counsel referred to in them were made in criminal cases only. These appointments, it is conceded in most of the decisions, were made, not upon any statutory authority, but by virtue of the inherent powers of the courts, and cogent reasons are given for the necessity of this power for the protection of the indigent defendant suffering under “the double misfortune of •poverty, and the accusation of crime.”
It cannot be said that this course of reasoning applies with equal force to a civil action, to which a poor person is a party and in which property rights only are at stake. Besides, the legislature has not left the protection of the rights of the poor suitor in a civil action to the exercise of the inherent powers of the court as in criminal causes, but it has, by express statute, regulated thé course of procedure in such instances. When the applicant is admitted by the court to sue or defend as a poor person, counsel and all other officers requisite for the prosecution or defense of his suit are assigned him, and such attorney and officers are required to do
The statute must be understood to express .the whole intention of the legislature, and, we think, that in its construction the maxim expressio unius est exclusio alterius, applies. The statute provides for and contemplates only gratuitous services on the part of the attorney and other officers. We do not think the courts are authorized to add to the statute the qualification that the fees of the attorney shall be allowed by the court, and paid by the county. Such a construction would, in our opinion, open the door to grave abuses, and might subject the revenues of the county to serious drains.
The statute refers to the attorney as one of the officers of the court, and such he doubtless is, and such he has always been considered.' When admitted to practice, he takes an oath faithfully to perform his duties as an attorney of the court. One. of those duties as defined by the statute is, “Never -to reject from any consideration personal to himself the cause -of the defenseless or oppressed.” §979 Burns 1894, Sub. 8.
We cannot believe that the construction we have put upon this section will result in any practical hardship, or that the courts will have any difficulty in commanding the services of able and conscientious members of the bar, when such services are required for the protection of the poor and defenseless, whose rights or wrongs are the subjects of judicial inquiry in civil actions. The eager desire of young practitioners to take part in the exciting contests of the bar; the opportunity afforded to the ambitious to achieve reputation by a display of forensic talent; and the higher motives supplied by feelings of humanity and benevolence, will, as we believe, in every case, secure a prompt response to the appointment of the court where the gratuitous services of an attorney are called for.
It is objected by counsel for the appellee, that if the stat
Judgment reversed, with instructions to the superior court of Howard county to sustain the demurrer to the complaint, and for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.