60 Neb. 698 | Neb. | 1900
Douglas Cones, a practicing lawyer of Pierce county, instituted this action against George A. Brooks to obtain satisfaction of a claim for professional services. The petition is in three counts. The first charges that the plaintiff rendered services to Breyer, Roepke and Ahlmann, trustees, in an action brought by them against the defendant herein upon a promissory note. The second states that the trustees assigned their cause of action to Carl Korth, and that the plaintiff continued as attorney in the case and rendered valuable services therein. The third asserts an attorney’s lien for a general balance upon the note in suit. The district court sustained a general demurrer to the petition, and the plaintiff having declined to plead further, judgment was rendered against him. We learn from the briefs of counsel that the decision in favor of defendant resulted from the conclusion of the trial judge that the plaintiff had failed to give due notice of his lien. This being the only question argued in this court, we shall not consider any other. Section 8, chapter 7, Compiled Statutes, 1899, is as follows: “An attorney has a lien for a general balance of compensation upon any papers of his client which have come into his possession in the course of his professional employment; upon money in his hands belonging to his client, and in the hands of the adverse party in an action or proceeding in which the attorney was employed from the time of giving notice of the lien to that party.” This statute, which is declaratory of the common law, gives an attorney a lien upon all papers, books and documents of his client which have come into his possession in the course of his professional employment. It also gives him a like lien upon any money in his hands belonging to his client. These liens are known as general or retaining liens; they depend upon possession and do not attach to anything not in the hands of the attorney; they are complete and effective without notice to any one. Sanders v. Seelye, 128 Ill.,
The statutory and common law lien upon money in the hands of the adverse party in an action or proceeding in which the attorney was employed is a charging or specific lien, and is not perfected until notice has been given to the party in possession of the fund. Such notice is necessary to prevent a tona fide settlement of the controversy by the litigants and payment by the debtor to the creditor in ignorance of the attorney’s rights. Williams v. Ingersoll, 89 N. Y., 508. The notice need not be in writing or placed among the files of the case. Any notice of the existence of the claim, and that it will be asserted, is sufficient. Young v. Dearborn, 27 N. H., 324; Braden v. Ward, 42 N. J. Law, 518. The statute does not require that the notice shall be in any specific form, or that it shall be given in any particular way; and we have no right to add anything to the law by construction. These views are not in conflict with any of the past adjudications of this court; but it may be that they are not in accord with some intimations and dicta found in the earlier cases. Lavender v. Atkins, 20 Nebr., 206, Elliott v. Atkins, 26 Nebr., 403, and Sheedy v. McMurtry, 44 Nebr., 499, upon which counsel for defendant rely, are cases in which there was no money in the hands of the adverse party to which an attorney’s lien could attach. The question of notice was not so involved as to make any of these cases a precedent for this, In regard
Reversed and remanded.