187 Ky. 77 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1920
Opinion op the Court by
Reversing.
The appellants, Abner May, Polly May Stanley, Martha May Whitt, and Jeff May, were the children of Joseph and Nancy Justice May, and in 1911, were claiming to be the owners and entitled to the possession of a tract of land, estimated to contain 781 acres, in Pike county, and of which others claimed to be the owners and were in the possession. The appellants, P. B. Stratton and E. D. Stephenson composed a partnership, for the practice of the profession of law, at Pikeville, and the appellee, W. Scott Whitt, was, also, a lawyer, but, resided in the county about twenty-five miles from Pike-ville, the seat of justice for the county. In April, 1911, Abner May, Polly May Stanley, and Martha May Whitt, and as appellee claims, also, Jeff May employed the appellee, Whitt, and Stratton, as. lawyers to recover the lands for them, and entered into a contract, in writing, which was executed in triplicate, and a copy delivered to Stratton, and one to Whitt, by the terms of which the clients, whom we will, for convenience, call the Mays, engaged the services of Whitt and Stratton “to take whatever legal steps, they may deem necessary” to recover the tract of land, and to render whatever other services, as attorneys, which they deemed necessary, in the prosecution of their claim to the lands, and, as a compensation to the attorneys for their services, agreed to pay to them, a sum equal to the value of one-half of all the lands, minerals and timber, the attorneys should recover for them. After Whitt had secured this contract, he and Stratton prepared a petition for the Mays against the adversary claimants of the lands. Stratton drafted the petition, in the presence of Whitt, who secured its verification by their clients. To this petition, Stratton subscribed the name of Whitt, and the partner
(a) The appeal of Creen Charles will be first considered. Section 107, Kentucky Statutes, creates for the plaintiff’s attorney in an action for the recovery of lands, a lien upon the lands, if recovered, to secure the payment of his fee, in the absence of a contract, which would dispense with the lien. McIntosh v. Bach, 110 Ky. 701; Sears v. Collie, 148 Ky. 444; Johnson v. Breckenridge, 4 K. L. R. 994; Eginton v. Rusk, 3 K. L. R. 689. The lien, however, is purely a statutory one, and, for that reason, is not to be given a wider scope, than is provided by the statute. Rowe v. Fogle 88 Ky. 105. Conceding, for the present, that the contract was a binding one upon the Mays, and that Whitt substantially performed it upon his part when the judgment, by which the land was recovered was rendered, that he would have a lien upon the land to secure the payment of the fee provided for in the contract, would be beyond controversy, and the lien would relate back to the institution of the suit. If, however, he failed to take steps to enforce the lien, or to so make the record, that it would be notice to one, whose duty it was to inquire about it, that such a lien existed, and after the termination of the litigation the owners of the land should convey the legal title to a purchaser who should acquire it in good faith, and for value and without notice of the lien, it would no longer attach to the land in the hands of such purchaser. 2 R. C.
(b) Upon the issue, as to whether Whitt performed the contract so as to entitle him to the fee provided by it in the event of recovery, or whether he abandoned it, the evidence is very conflicting, but the chancellor adjudged for him upon the issue, and while the active preparation and management of the action were taken by Stratton & Stephenson, under all the facts developed by the record, we are not prepared, to hold that Whitt did not perform all the services, that were in contemplation between him and Stratton when the contract was entered into. The clients made no complaint of Whitt pending the litigation, and make none now in their testimony. It is clear, that they, with the exception, probably, of Jeff May, considered Whitt an attorney in the case for them throughout the litigation. They consulted with him when they desired to do so, and, at no time, indicated to him, that they proposed to dispense with his services. Whitt deposes, that he employed Stratton to assist him in the action, because Stratton resided at the seat of justice, and could, more readily, give attention
(c) Pollie May Stanley, Martha May Whitt and Jeff May, in their answer, deny the execution of the writing sued upon, and two of them allege their infancy as a defense to any recovery upon it. When they testify, however, the first two named, state, unreservedly, that they executed the writing containing the contract, and Martha May Whitt, who interposes her infancy in the pleading as a bar to recovery against her, testified, that she executed the writing, and does not, now desire to repudiate it, and she should not surely be required to do. so. Jeff May, who was an infant when the contract was made, denies, that he subscribed it, or ever made any such contract. ' While the evidence is contradictory upon the issue as to whether he made and executed the contract, he was, then, an infant, only seventeen years of age, and has, in no way, ratified it since that time, and is not bound upon it, and it was error to adjudge a recovery of him, because of it. If he executed or made the contract sued on, he repudiated it very soon after becoming twenty-one years of age and before receiving any benefits of the contract. While legal services of value, rendered for an infant, are treated as necessaries, for which he may be required to pay a reasonable compensation, he is not competent to make a contract for same,
(d) It was error to adjudge, that Whitt recover one-third of the coal and minerals, which had been conveyed to Stratton & Stephenson. -He merely had a lien upon the property, recovered, and was not the owner of it in kind, and if the Mays had remained the owners, he would not have been entitled to recover from them any part of the property in kind, but, his only right would have been to have an enforcement of his lien. There were no contractual relations between Whitt and any of the parties which justified such a judgment. When the final judgment was- rendered in the action for the recovery of the land, Whitt, under his contract, as between him and Stratton was entitled to have a fee equal to the then value of one-fourth of the interests in the land recovered by him for Abner May, Polly May Stanley, and Martha Whitt, and had a-lien upon such interests to secure its payment, and Stratton & Stephenson, through Stratton, would have been entitled to a similar fee, secured by a similar lien, upon the interest recovered by them, if they had not, by subsequent contract with the Mays, reduced the amount of their fee, and by the acceptance of conveyance to them, of a portion, released their lien upon the remainder of the property. Under the contract, if it be conceded that Whitt and Stratton performed equal services, one-half of the interest of each of the clients in the property, would be all that Whitt could have been equitably considered to have recovered,, and hence, his lien would extend to only one-half of the property recovered. The sale by the Mays to Charles, without the knowledge or consent of Whitt, could not affect his right to a lien upon the remainder of the property, nor could the acceptance of a conveyance by Stratton & Stephenson to the portion of the property conveyed to them, with the full knowledge upon their part of the equity of Whitt, affect his lien upon that portion of the property. Charles being a purchaser in good faith for value, and without notice, of the portion of the property conveyed to him, there was left only the portion, conveyed to Stratton & Stephenson subject to Whitt’s lien. It does not appear,'that the loss of Whitt’s lien upon the property bought by Charles, is attributable
The judgment is therefore reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to set aside the judgment and to dismiss the action as to appellant, Charles; to ascertain and fix the amount of the fee to which Whitt is entitled under his contract, as against Abner May, Polly May Stanley and Martha May Whitt, and to render a judgment in his favor against them respectively, therefor, and to adjudge that same is a lien upon an undivided one-half of the interest in the coal and minerals, which each of them conveyed to Stratton & Stehpenson, and which as above stated, amounts in all, to three-eighths of the coal and minerals to which Stratton & Stephenson hold title, and to enter a judgment for the enforcement of Whitt’s lien against same, and for such proceedings, as are not inconsistent with this opinion.