This is an appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Lowndes County dismissing the petition of the appellant for want of jurisdiction on the ground of an adequate remedy at law, and holding further that proceedings in the court of ordinary, which the appellant sought to have declared void, were authorized under 'Code § 113-1522, as amended, and that there was no appeal from the judgment of the court of ordinary fixing the fee of the attorney appellant for services rendered the executor of an estate. These holdings of the court were enumerated as error.
The appellant’s petition alleged that he, an attorney, contracted with the executor of the estate to represent the estate for a fee under the schedule of fees adopted by the Valdosta Bar Association; that the executor terminated his services and they agreed upon a fee of $400 for his services; that later the executor advised him that $400 was excessive and offered to pay him $200, which he refused to accept. Thereafter, the executor filed a petition in the court of ordinary asking the court to fix the attorney’s fee. The appellant filed a caveat to the petition, alleging that for reasons therein set out the petition should be denied, “as not being filed in compliance with the spirit and intent of the act relating to the authority of administrators to provide for the estate competent legal counsel, or relating to an instance when the administrator or the legal counsel may obtain the ordinary’s approval, or obtain a judgment fixing attorney’s fees and expenses.” After hearing evidence, the ordinary entered judgment denying the appellant’s caveat, sustaining the prayer of the executor’s petition, and awarding attorney’s fees of $200. There was no appeal from this judgment. Thereafter the appellant filed this petition in equity, seeking to declare void the judgment of the court of ordinary.
*12 The question arises as to whether the contract between the appellant and the executor is enforceable at law; and whether the court of ordinary has jurisdiction where, as here, a controversy as to the fee arises between the attorney and the executor, to determine the issue and fix the fee upon petition filed by the executor.
In
Kimball v. Casey,
In
Cromer v. Chambers,
We are of the opinion that while a contract between an attorney and an executor as to payment of attorney’s fees for representing the -estate is enforceable at law, where a controversy arises between the attorney and the representative of the estate as to the fee, either party may by petition to the ordinary have the issue determined by the ordinary. The judgment of the court of ordinary is appealable under Code § 113-1522, as amended.
The failure of the appellant to appeal from this judgment of the court of ordinary made that judgment the law of the case. The appellant had an adequate remedy at law by appeal, which he failed to exercise. Thus his equitable action to declare the judgment void will not lie, as equity will not entertain jurisdic
*13
tion where there is an adequate and complete remedy at law.
Code
§§ 37-102, 37-120;
Burress v. Montgomery,
Judgment affirmed.
