10 Abb. N. Cas. 465 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1882
This is a motion by plaintiffs to vacate an appearance by an attorney in their behalf, as unauthorized.
The attorney does not dispute the plaintiffs’ right to substitute another attorney in his place, but insists they should not be permitted to do so until they fulfill their obligations to one whom the present attorney immediately represents.
Prior to 1864, Phelps, Dodge & Co., -the plaintiffs, made an agreement with one Douglas by which they employed the latter to prosecute a claim of theirs against the government, growing out of alleged illegal exactions of duties and fees. By this agreement Douglas undertook to “ endeavor to establish the claim by legal decisions or otherwise.’ ’
He was to be paid for his services a sum equal to one-half of the recovery, and was to bear all the costs and expenses of the proceedings. In 1864 he employed attorneys and brought suit in the name of the plaintiffs against the collector of the port of New York.
Until this judgment was recovered plaintiffs took no part in the proceedings and apparently manifested no interest therein.
Their first intervention in the suit was an effort to wrest its control from the executrix. A motion was made, ostensibly by the defendant in the suit, but apparently at the instigation or in the interest of the ' plaintiffs, to vacate the appearance of the attorney substituted by the executrix, upon the ground that the agreement between plaintiffs and Douglas was champertous and void, and if not, because the executrix had no power to appoint an attorney for the plaintiffs. This motion was heard before my predecessor in this court, and denied. Notwithstanding this, the plaintiffs succeeded, through the co-operation of the defendant’s attorneys, in ejecting the attorney from the suit during pendency upon a writ of error from the judgment.
Upon the affirmance of the judgment, however, when they applied to enter a mandate in this court, the clerk , of this court refused to recognize the right of any attorney to appear for them except the present attorney. Hence this motion.
The plaintiffs now insist that their contract with Douglas was one for his personal exertions, and by his death before entire performance they are released from all obligations to his executrix ; that his interest did not survive his death, and his executrix was not authorized to assume charge of the suit and appoint the present attorney.
It is more doubtful whether the executrix upon Douglas’s death had the right to control the further prosecution of the action. But after she was permitted to do so by the -plaintiffs for a considerable period of time, and by her exertions and at her expense the judgment was obtained which the plaintiffs now seek to control, the objection to her conduct seems an ungracious one, and should not be willingly enforced.
• The question of her authority to appoint the attorney must have been passed upon by Judge Blatchford on the former motion to vacate the appearance,, and have been determined affirmatively, otherwise the motion would have prevailed.
Whether this authority was held to be within the scope and contemplation of the original contract between plaintiffs and Douglas, or to be implied from the subsequent conduct of the parties, does not appear; nor is it material now. It suffices that there are no clamorous equities in the present application to urge a reconsideration of that adjudication.
For thirteen years the plaintiffs acquiesced in what was done by Douglas and his executrix; but from the time they ascertained that a large judgment had been recovered, they have seemingly been unwilling to recognize the agreement.
They now present affidavits in which, upon information and by innuendo, they impute fraudulent conduct to Douglas, not toward themselves, but toward the government.
They claim that the judgment would not have been
They represent themselves willing to pay a reasonable compensation to the executrix; but at the same time they are insisting they are under no legal obligation, and they have made no definite proposition of judgment.
Notwithstanding all this, the plaintiffs have the right to collect the judgment themselves, and for that purpose to appoint such attorney as they desire.
They did not transfer the cause of action to Douglas, nor did the agreement effect an equitable assignment to Douglas of half of the proceeds of the suit.
The suit now being at an end, the executrix has no interest in controlling its further disposition.
She has, however, the right to assert any -lien upon the judgment which exists by virtue of the agreement and the service rendered under it.
If Douglas had been an attorney, the agreement and services would have created a lien. There is no magic in the name “attorney” which conjures up a lien. It is the nature of the services and the control, actual or potential, which the mechanical or professional laborer has over the object intrusted to him, which determines whether a lien is or is not conferred. The services which Douglas was employed to render and did render, were in character attorneys’ services. As he appointed and discharged attorneys, he had through them the same control over the suit as he would if he had been an attorney himself.
It was said by Best, Ch. J., in Jacobs v. Latour (5 Bing. 130). “ As between debtor and creditor the doctrine of lien is so equitable, it cannot be favored too much.” The remark is peculiarly applicable in the present case. It would not be proper to determine
It may be, the plaintiffs have equities and legal rights with which the court has not been impressed, and from which they should not be definitely precluded by the present decision. It may ultimately appear that the executrix should not receive the whole compensation contemplated by the agreement, but the burden should rest upon the plaintiffs, who are seeking to show that she is not entitled to the sum which they promised to pay when their claim should be established.
It is therefore ordered that the plaintiffs’ motion be granted, upon the payment to the executrix of Douglas of one-half of the amount of the judgment, without prejudice to the right of the plaintiffs to recover at law if they can show themselves entitled to the whole sum, or such part thereof as may be just.