This cause was heard by the circuit court of Shelby county, and the trial resulted in a judgment for defendant. The facts are in dispute. It is not controverted, however, that on November 18, 1913, two sons of the original plaintiff, James W. Perkins, were killed in an explosion occurring in a coal mine operated by appellee, the Alabama Fuel & Iron Company, a body corporate; that on November 26, 1913, an attorney who was, employed in the law office of intervener was sent to see said Perkins and wife, the sole distributees of intestates, and drew up and had signed by the Perkinses a written contract, in which intervener was' employed to bring suit against appellee for said homicides. This agreement provided, in substance, for a remuneration to intervener in a sum “equal to one-half of the recovery there may be had in this case, either by settlement or compromise out of court, or in court, or by a verdict of a jury, or by the court without intervention of a jury,” and, in case there should be no recovery, that nothing was to be paid for the said services and undertaking. The contract contained the further stipulation:
“It is further agreed that neither party shall settle or compromise this case either in or out of the court without the consent of the other; and each party agrees not to dismiss any suit that may b'e brought in any court to recover in this case' unless by the joint consent of both parties to this instrument.”
Intervener insists that he had no knowledge or notice of such contract, and that his name was signed thereto by Ivey, who acted without previous authority from him; that on December
Suit for said homicides was commenced in the circuit court of Shelby county, Ala., on December 6, 1913, being instituted by intervener as attorney for said administrator of the Perkins’ estates. On December 5, 1913, the vice president and general manager of appellee corporation, and its attorney, called at Perkins’ home and offered to settle these claims against the company, to which offer Perkins replied that he could not accept, because of the existence of a contract of employment between himself and intervener as his attorney in such matter, and on request Perkins produced said written contract and exhibited it to defendant’s agents. Perkins was then requested by said officers or agents of defendant to call at the office of said company’s attorney, in Birmingham, at a designated date thereafter, which Perkins promised to do. On December 8, 1918, when next in Birmingham, Perkins called on his attorney (intervener), stated the offer of compromise so made by the company to him, and indicated that he wished to accept. Intervener did not expressly refuse his assent to this acceptance on the part of the administrator for the estate of his intestates and plaintiff in the suit, but informed the administrator that he must not be understood as in any way waiving his lien as the attorney bringing the suit, secured to him by section 3011 of the Code of 1907. Thereafter Perkins went immediately to the office of the defendant company’s attorney, accepted the compromise so offered as such administrator, was paid the sum agreed upon, and executed a full release and discharge of the defendant for such personal injuries.
While Perkins was in appellee’s office, and before this settlement was concluded, a phone conversation ensued between inter-
(1) This acquiescence in the settlement is denied by inter-vener, who says that he phoned to the company’s attorney to put him on notice that intervener would rest on his rights as attorney under the Alabama statute. The testimony of the defendant’s vice president and general manager was to the effect that he desired to settle direct with the deceased miners’ father and mother, and that he did not want any damage suit lawyer to get any of the company’s money. This conflicting testimony presented an issue of fact for the determniation of a jury (Amerson v. Corona Coal Co.,
The attorney bringing the original suits for said Perkins, as administrator, asserted by appropriate petition his lien for compensation claimed on the “suit” under section 3011 of the Code of 1907. Defendant’s demurrer to the petition for inter-
Intervener contends that by his employment as attorney, and the bringing of the “suit” pursuant thereto, he acquired a lien on the suit, that could not be compromised by the parties, and that, until this lien was satisfied, he had the same right and power to direct and continue said suit, to the end of the enforcement of his lien as attorney, for the amount so due him; that is to say, intervener claims that the compromise, without his consent, and without the satisfaction of his attorney’s lien, had not the effect to discharge or destroy that lien, and that as -such attorney of record bringing the suit he may prosecute it to final judgment, for the ascertainment of the amount of his lien, and for the satisfaction thereof, as though no such compromise had ever been made between the parties to the suit. In Western Railway Co. v. Foshee,
The question, therefore, is the validity of the statute and its application to intervener’s contract rights. The statute provides: (1) “Attorneys at law shall have a lien on all papers and .money of their clients in their possession, for services rendered to them, in reference thereto, and may retain such papers -until said claims are satisfied, and may apply such money to the satisfaction of said claim.”
(2) “Upon suits, judgments, and decrees for money, they shall have a lien superior to all liens but tax liens, and no person shall be at liberty to satisfy said suit, judgment, or decree, until ■the lien or claim of the attorney for his fees is fully satisfied; and attorneys at law shall have the same right and power over said suits, judgments, and decrees, to enforce their liens, as their clients had or may have for the amount due thereon to them.”— Code 1907, § 3011.
Under subsection 2, it has been held that an attorney for the plaintiff has a lien on the cause of action, and may intervene to prosecute the original suit to a final judgment, notwithstanding the parties plaintiff and defendant have settled the pending cause in so far as'the plaintiff’s interest therein is concerned.—Fuller v. Lanett Bleaching Co.,
Discussing the constitutionality of the statute, appellee’s counsel admits that intervener’s position depends altogether on the validity of the Alabama statute giving attorney a lien, and insists that our court, in the authorities cited, was very careful to state that “the constitutionality of the act was not before the court for decision.” In Western Railway of Alabama v. Foshee, supra, it is said: “The constitutional validity of acts of this sort has been generally affirmed by the courts.in states where such acts have been adopted.—Standidge v. Chicago Rys. Co.,
in Fuller v. Lanett Bleaching So., supra, Chief Justice Anderson begins the discussion by reserving the question of the constitutionality of subsection 2 of section 3011 of the Code of 1907. The opinion of Mr. Justice Mayfield in the Lowery Case, however, adverted to the constitutionality of the statute, saying: “While nothing was said in the opinion in Fuller’s Case as to the constitutionality of the statute, it was of necessity held valid, because the right of plaintiff’s attorney to prosecute was based solely on the statute. It therefore follows that the defendant’s special pleas, while good against the plaintiff’s rights, were no bar to the attorney’s right to prosecuté the suit as for his attorney’s fees and the enforcement of his lien given by the statute.”
Appellee insists that a contract of employment, containing a provision such as that hereinabove set out, renders the same void as being opposed to the settled policy of the law to discourage litigation and to encourage the settlement of controversies. The trial judge had this view of the law, for, at defendant’s request, he instructed the jury in writing as follows: “The court charges the jury that if you believe, from the evidence, that the contract of employment between the plaintiff and intervener had a provision therein in substance providing that neither party should settle nor compromise the case, either in or out of court, without the consent of the other, then I charge you that inter-vener cannot recover.”
(2) It is generally recognized that the public policy of a state is to be found in its Constitution and statutes and judicial decisions. In order to ascertain the public policy of a state in respect to any matter, the acts of thé legislative department should primarily be looked to, because a legislative act, if constitutional, declares in terms the policy of the state.—Western Railway of Alabama v. Foshee, supra, 183 Ala. p. 192,
In the early stage of the development of the common law, there crept in this policy of discouraging litigations-and encouraging settlements of controverted questions, and as one of the methods of enforcing the same all strangers were prevented from acquiring an interest in the subject-matter of the litigation or in the suit itself. If the clause in question had the effect to prevent the client from making a settlement without the consent of the attorney, the clause of the contract would come under the ban of the common law; yet it would not necessarily follow that the whole contract of employment would be avoided. That would depend on the severability of the void clause from the contract.
In those jurisdictions in which the question is settled there is a wide difference of opinion, some courts holding the whole contract invalid (In re. Snyder,
It will be observed that in many of the jurisdictions by which these cases are decided there were no statutes permitting the attorneys to acquire a lien for their fee on the suit, or, if so, as observed by Chief Justice Anderson in the Fuller Case, these
(3) The severability of contracts is recognized in this state. If the right can be established without the void stipulation, the recovery is not affected by the illegal clause in a contract.—Gen. Elec. Co. v. Ft. Deposit, supra; Sales-Davis Co. v. Henderson-Boyd Lumber Co.,
(4) If the contract of • employment of the attorney, in the case at bar, was the written contract in question (and under the evidence this was a question' for the jury) it is clear that under the Alabama statute (Code, § 3011), and its construction by our court, the attorney’s right may be established without the stipulation to the effect that settlement should not be had by the plaintiff without the consent of his counsel. The questioned section of the contract is thus severable, and the other provisions of the contract are not impaired. Section 3011 of the Code reads into' such contracts its provisions, and by the expressed terms of the statute forbids to satisfy said suit “until the lien or claim of the attorney for his fees is fully satisfied.” If, however, the contract of' employment was not that entered into by Perkins and Ivey, but that made with intervener on the 4th day of December, 1913, and was in terms as detailed by intervener and by Perkins, as witnesses on the trial, no question of objectionable clause was presented. However, the exact terms of this later contract was' made a jury question by tendencies of the evidence offered by the defendant.
(5) It is further insisted by appellee that section 3011 is unconstitutional as “class legislation.” The general rule is that one who assails the classification in a statute must carry the burden of showing that it does not rest on any reasonable basis, but is essentially arbitrary.—Bachtel v. Wilson,
(6) Laws may be passed applicable only to the members of a class, where the classification rests upon some disability, attribute, or clasification marking them as proper objects for the operation of such special legislation, if not expressly forbidden by the Constitution.—Standidge v. Chicago R. Co.,
(7) It may be observed of the statute in question, that it does not except from its operation any person of the designated class, that the class dealt with is a proper object for the operation of such special legislation, and that the classification is founded on distinctions reasonable in principle. The fact that the representation of parties litigant by a counsel may operate to bring attorneys for plaintiffs within the benefit of the attorney’s lien statute, oftener than where the lien to be protected is that of an attorney representing the defendant, does not make the statute clearly and acually arbitrary and unreasonable. For illustration, it is noted that under our system of pleading, in a proper case, a defendant may recover a judgment over against the plaintiff, and, in another, both parties may be decreed to have an interest in the subject-matter of the suit. In such cases the statute is applicable alike to the liens of the attorneys of both. It is clear to us that the statute is a general law (State, ex rel. Coliman v. Pitts,
(8) Nor is the statutory lien on the “suit” made dependent on the service of process. The filing of the complaint at law, or the bill in chancery, in the court having jurisdiction of the cause and in a county of the venue, is the commencement of the suit on which the statute fixes a lien. — 2 Thornton on Attorneys, § 617; Code 1907, §§ 4853, 3092; Maverick v. Duffee,
(9) On the trial of an intervention by the attorney enforcing his lien, liability vel non and the amount thereof will be determined as it would have been determined in the prosecution of the
(10) In the instant case, intervener admits in his petition 'the settlement on the part of the plaintiff as administrator. It was therefore not incumbent on the defendant to defend as to the interest of the original plaintiff. However, on cross-examination, the plaintiff, Perkins, as a witness for intervener, admitted that on January 27, 1914, witness and intervener entered into a written agreement whereby the said Perkins, as such administrator, was to receive one-half of whatever sum was recovered by verdict of a jury in said cause on the further prosecution of the intervention suit; that is to say, that of whatever sum the court awards intervener, after taking cognizance of the $4,000 already paid to Perkins by the defendant in accord and satisfaction of his claim, the said estate was to receive one-half. Thus there was presented a tendency of the evidence, making it a jury question, whether the original plaintiff, as administrator, still had an interest in the prosecution of the suit by intervener, and, if so, the extent of such interest at the trial. In view of this evidence, the trial court committed no error in admitting the contract of settlement made with the defendant by the administrator, and the paper writing evidencing the aforesaid agreement, of date January 27, • 1914, between the plaintiff administrator and intervener.
It results, therefore, that intervener’s • demurrer to defendant’s plea No. 8 should have been sustained.
Written charge B, given at defendant’s request, is not in harmony with the views we have expressed, and for this reason a reversal should be entered.
(11) Appellee further insists that the judgment should be affirmed, on the ground that the record shows that the defendant was entitled to the affirmative charge because of plaintiff’s failure to prove a material averment of his complaint.—Choate v. A. G. S. R. R. Co.,
On the trial the defendant did not request the general charge, but induced the court to instruct the jury in writing as follows: “A. The court charges the jury that the defendant is not an insurer of the lives and safety of its employees, and unless inter-vener has reasonably satisfied you by the evidence in this case that the explosion which caused intestate’s death was due to some negligence on the part of defendant, or was due to the negligence of some servant for whose acts it is legally responsible, then I charge you that intervener would not be entitled to recover.”
In Clinton Min. Co. v. Bradford,
See, also, Travis v. Sloss-Sheffield, etc., Co.,
The testimony set out in the bill of exceptions affords an inference of the relation of master and servant at the time of plaintiff’s death. The affirmative charge was not requested, testing the sufficiency of this evidence, and the trial court could not, ex mero motu, give the general charge.—Gaynor v. L. & N. R. R. Co.,
It results, from what we have said, that the judgment of the circuit court must be reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
