Lead Opinion
Appellant, an attorney at law, admitted to practice in the state and federal courts, including the United States Customs Court, seeks to enforce a lien against a fund of money set aside to satisfy a claim for professional services. The question presented is whether appellant has an attorney’s lien.
Stern, a Customs House broker, on January 17, 1925, contracted with appellee, who was engaged in importing artificial flowers and feathers at the port of New York, to represent it in obtaining a reduction and refund of excess customs duties on artificial flowers under the Tariff Act of 1922 (section 1 [19 USCA § 121]). The contract read in part as follows: “We authorize said S. Stem to make, file and prosecute protests and appeals in our name, to retain counsel, and to engage the assistance of our custom brokers or agents (but at their own expense), and generally to use all lawful means to secure the allowance of said refunds and abatements of excessive customs duties.” It provided a payment of one-third of all amounts refunded as compensation for all services.
On May 22, 1926, after retaining'appellant, a second contract was made, when other counsel than appellant were also retained, and it provided for a fee of 50 per cent, in which appellant had a third interest. Appellant was retained by Mr. Stern, and his retainer was fully ratified by appellees later. Refunds were eventually awarded to appellee, and appellant, not having been paid, asserts an attorney’s lien. By agreement, the amount which appellant would receive if the lien is lawful was deposited in a trust company to await the determination of this controversy. Appellant’s services consisted of filing and proseeuting protests against assessments, appearing before the United States Customs Court when the protests appeared on the calendar, proseeuting the protests in the court after a decision in a test case, and obtaining judgment orders thereon sustaining the protests, holding the merchandise dutiable at 60 per cent, instead of 90 per cent. Some items were reliquidated, at plaintiff’s request, at 60 per cent, by the collector without prosecution of the protests before the court. Blumenthal & Co. v. United States, 14 Cust. App. 17.
In May, 1930, when payment for his services was refused, appellant filed with the collector a notice of lien as appellee’s attorney, claiming under section 475 of the Judiciary Law of New York state (ConsoL
Section 475 of the N. Y. Judiciary Law provides: “From the commencement of an action or special proceeding, or the service of an answer containing a counterclaim, the attorney who appears for a party has a lien upon his client’s cause of action, claim or counterclaim, which attaches to a verdict, report, decision, judgment or final order in his client’s favor, and the proceeds thereof in whosoever hands they may come; and the lien can not be affected by any settlement between the parties before or after judgment or final order.”
The federal courts sitting in a state have enforced statutes of that state creating attorney’s liens whether the suit for services in which the lien was claimed was originally brought in a state court or in a federal court. In re Baxter & Co.,
But it is argued that section 3477 of the U. S. Revised Statutes, now-section 203, title 31, U. S. Code (31 USCA § 203), forbids the creation of a lien. This section applies only to voluntary transfers or assign
Nutt v. Knut,
The appellant’s lien was not created by an agreement with the appellee’s agent Stem, but was created solely by the statute, section 475 of the N. Y. Judiciary Law, by operation of law. Section 3477 does not apply to eases of liens transferred by operation of law. Western Pac. R. Co. v. United States,
It is contended that the agreement between Stern and the appellant is illegal and void because section 270 of the state Penal Law (Consol. Laws, c. 40) makes it unlawful for a layman “to make it a business to solicit employment for a lawyer, or to furnish attorneys or counsel or an attorney and counsel to render legal services, * * * without having first been duly and regularly licensed and admitted to practice law in the courts of record of this state.” The Customs Court permits Customs House brokers to practice and appear before it. The state statute could not prohibit this. Byrne v. Kansas City, etc., Ry. Co. (C. C.)
As pointed out by the New York Court of Appeals in People v. Title Guarantee & Trust Co.,
The appellant has a lien for the services, and we think that lien may be impressed upon the fund which has been deposited by agreement of the parties.
Decree reversed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
The lien created by section 475 of the New York Judiciary Law dates from the commencement of a legal proceeding and is in favor only of the attorney .at law who appears. The Customs Court may indeed be a court within the meaning of that section, and it sits within the state, but an attorney appearing in it need not be an attorney at law of New York or of any other state. Brooks was indeed an attorney at law of New York and he appeared, but the services which he rendered did not require an attorney at law. I doubt if an attorney at law gets a lien except for services as such; that he is secured merely because of his office. So far as the courts of New York have declared themselves at all, they seem to have taken this view. Flint v. Yan Dusen, 26 Hun (N. Y.) 606; Tynan v. Mart,
But if I am wrong about that, and the services were those of an attorney at law, I cannot see how the plaintiff can escape the effect of section 270 of the New York Penal Law, which forbids any one to make a business of furnishing attorneys to render legal services. Stern certainly furnished the plaintiff as an attorney to render the services, whatever they were, and as he was in the habit of making such contracts he was in the business of doing so. People v. Meola,
