182 Ga. 197 | Ga. | 1936
Lead Opinion
We are of the opinion that the ruling in this case must be controlled by the decision in Davis v. First National Bank of Blakely, 139 Ga. 702 (78 S. E. 190, 46 L. R. A. (N. S.) 750), which case, as this court held, involved a very important question, to wit: the authority of an attorney at law to bind his client by a compromise resulting in a consent decree, in direct opposition to the instructions of his client, with the knowledge of leading counsel for the adverse side of such violation of the instructions. The petition in the Davis case made substantially the same allegations as contained in the petition now before us, and for the purposes of demurrer the demurrant must admit the facts alleged to be true. In respect to the case now sub judice we can not do better than use the language of this court as expressed by Mr.
“Section 4955 of the Civil Code does not mean that when a client employs an attorney to bring or defend a suit, it ceases to be the client’s litigation, that he has no power to say whether he will litigate or compromise his suit, and that the attorney becomes the owner or absolute master of the litigation, so as to be able to sell or give away his client’s property 'rights by contract, in spite of his client. This is a very different thing from the management of the litigation and agreements connected therewith, such as agreeing to a reference of the case to an auditor or a submission of it to arbitration, to allow copies of papers to be used in evidence, to waive notices, and the like. Neither does the statutory lien which an attorney has upon a suit, which ordinarily prevents his client from settling or dismissing the case so as to defeat him of his fee, have the effect to entirely oust the client from the case.
“It was contended that fraud, in order to set aside a judgment, must be fraud on the part of the adverse party or his attorney; and expressions of this sort have been used in some of the decisions. But they were cases where the magistrate forgot to -notify a litigant of the time when a case would be heard, as he had agreed to do,, or where the fraud alleged was that of some third party. In none of them was a violation of duty by an attorney, with knowledge of the adverse party, involved. If one knowingly obtains from an attorney at law or agent, by agreement, a surrender of the property rights claimed by his client or principal, in spite of instructions to the contrary, what name shall be given to the conduct of the party inducing the agent or attorney to violate his duty? In Holker v.
In the present case, as in the Davis case, it is possible that some amendment to the petition may be required (which can be done after the case is reinstated), but we accord with what is said upon this subject in the Davis case. It is accordingly ordered, as was done in the Davis case, that all allegations and prayers of the petition which the court dismissed on demurrer “be stricken from the petition, except those in reference to the bringing of the former action, its termination in the consent decree, and the attack upon such decree; that such striking shall not be an adjudication that the plaintiff has no cause of action or right of recovery in respect to these matters; but that the present case stand as one to set aside the consent decree, and reinstate the former case as it was before the decree was rendered.”
Judgment reversed, with direction.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. As I view the record, the judgment of the trial judge should be affirmed. Although the judgment leads to results which could not have been reached except by agreement, the undisputed fact is that all the parties did agree to the verdict and judgment, the minors through their next friend. The motion to set aside, when reduced to its essence, is that the agreed