11 N.Y.S. 562 | New York City Court | 1890
Plaintiff, as assignee of the law firm of Dana & Clarkson, Esqs., brought this action in March, 1889, to recover the sum of $536.16 •alleged to be due for professional services, including disbursements, rendered by plaintiff’s assignors to defendants, between October 1, 1880, and March. 1, 1888. The issues were referred to Hon. Joseph Aspinall, who rendered a report in favor of plaintiff for the full amount claimed, and from the judgment entered thereon, defendants take this appeal. It appears from the evidence that in October, 1880, defendants in this action had been sued by Andrew S. Wheeler, and that he had recovered a judgment against them, which had been affirmed by the general term of the supreme court. -Their former lawyer, Mr. Knaebel, had left the city, and defendants retained Dana ■& Clarkson to prosecute an appeal to the court of appeals. This they did, and with the aid of Messrs. Van Cott & Winslow, retained by defendants as •counsel, a reversal of the judgment was obtained in the court of appeals, and a new trial ordered. On the new trial before a referee, defendants were successful, and in October, 1882, Messrs. Dana & Clarkson obtained the referee’s report in their favor, and on February 23, 1888, Dana & Clarkson entered final judgment. It will be observed that there is a lapse of over five years between the rendition of the referee’s report and the entry of final judgment. After the rendition of the referee’s report, it appears that Dana &' Clarkson sought to obtain compensation for the services they had rendered, and, failing that, they took no further steps • till February, 1888, when, as before stated, they entered final judgment. The principal defense urged by the learned counsel for the appellants is the statue of..limitations, it being contended by him that the request or demand in 1882 for payment, before proceeding further, was virtually a discharge or abandonment, by Dana & Clarkson, of their position as attorneys for the defendants, and that the statute began to run from that time. There is a decided conflict between the parties as to exactly what took place in 1882,—as to whether Dana & Clarkson then, in default of payment of their claims, merely sat still and postponed the entry of final judgment till some arrangement should be made for the settlement of their claim, or as to whether, as defendants claim, Dana & Clarkson abandoned the case, and were directed by defendants to do nothing further. Certain letters from Dana & Clarkson to the defendant Peter A. Young, ranging in date from November, 1882, to June, 1883, apparently relating to Dana & Clarkson’s request for a settlement, were offered in evidence on the-trial by defendants’ counsel, but, as they are not printed in the case, we are-left in the dark as to their contents. The learned referee who heard the witnesses testify, and who also had these letters before him, has refused to find, as requested by defendants’ counsel, that in November, 1882, “Dana & Clark-son refused to perform further services for the defendants unless they were paid for the services up to that'time rendered, and the defendants requested said Dana & Clarkson1 to perform no further services in said action,” and we feel constrained to adopt his finding in that respect.