52 Ga. App. 436 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1936
The original petition was brought against two defendants, composing a law partnership. As twice amended without objection, it alleged that the petitioner had employed the attorneys to represent him in collecting moneys in connection with litigation in the superior court, where the petition was filed and the defendants resided, and in the courts of Delaware; that they had collected in Delaware $153,732.07; that they paid to petitioner $109,122.12; that petitioner “obligated to pay said attorneys the sum of $37,000 attorney’s fees for themselves and associates, and the said attorneys retained in their hands and declined upon written demand to pay to petitioner the balance due to him, viz. $33,204.44;” that petitioner “had previously paid on account, to be credited on said obligation of said $37,000 the sum of $25,500 before their collection of the above sums, so that at the time of the collection by respondents of said sums due them by plaintiff, under said obligation to pay them the sum of $37,000, the balance of $11,500;” that “said attorneys came into possession of said money as attorneys for petitioner; that it belongs to him; that they have violated their trust in said relationship; that they declined and have declined upon personal and written demand to repay the same.” To this petition the defendants filed general and special demurrers, which, so far as not met by the amend-
It thus appears from the petition as amended and sought to be amended that the defendants collected $49,695.36 and $104,036.71, a total of $153,732.07; that the amount of the fee to the defendants themselves was finally fixed and agreed on with the petitioner through his representative at $25,000; that the maximum amount of fees for associated attorneys was $12,000, a total of fees as credited to the defendants by the petition .amounting to $37,000; that petitioner, prior to the collection, had paid on these fees from has own funds $18,000 to the defendants on their personal fees, leaving a balance of $7,000 due to them from their collection, and $7,500 to associate attorneys, leaving a balance for those attorneys, properly payable from the collection, of $4,500, allowing the full maximum amount which it is alleged was limited under agreement with the defendants, making a total of $11,500 in unpaid fees deductible from the collected funds; that the defendants had actually paid to the petitioner $109,027.63, thus leaving an unpaid balance due to him of $44,704.44 less the $11,500 of unpaid fees. It was alleged that the defendants “ retained after deduction of all fees due or contracted for the sum of $33,204.44, which has been demanded of them and of which payment has been refused.”
1. Under the general rule as well as that obtaining in this State, the summary remedy to enforce the payment of money belonging to a client, wrongfully withheld by his attorney, is penal in its nature (Haygood v. Haden, 119 Ga. 463, 46 S. E. 625); and such a proceeding is not intended to be employed where, under all the proper pleadings, the question at issue is not the dereliction of the attorney in wrongfully withholding the funds of his client, but is the proper construction of an ambiguous contract. In other words, such a rule will lie only where an attorney either seeks, in opposition to the explicit terms of his agreement, knowingly and fraudulently to withhold a sum not authorized thereby, or in withholding such funds acts in ignorance or misapprehension of facts which his duty to his client obligates him to know. West v. Hill, 23 Ga. App. 636 (99 S. E. 155). See also Hawkins v. Smith, 56 Ga. 571, 576.
2. While according to uniform authority courts will on any prima facie showing issue a summary rule against an attorney, where it is made to appear that he is wrongfully withholding moneys indisputably belonging to a client, it is nevertheless the rule at common law that the courts will refuse to continue to lend themselves to such a procedure, where it subsequently develops that the purpose is not to adjudicate such manifest dereliction of the attorney, but to determine disputed rights and credits, so as to render the proceeding equivalent to an action of debt or assumpsit. Under the rule at common law, if such be the purpose of the proceeding, and if by the petition no professional misconduct be indisputably shown to exist, it will be summarily dismissed; and under such rule, even where a dereliction is charged, the attorney is permitted to purge and exculpate himself by stating controvert
4. The amendment was not subject to objection because it alleged that only one of the two defendants, who composed a law partnership, agreed to fix the fee of their associates at an amount not in excess of a stated sum, with the result that the other member of the partnership would not be bound thereby in a rule proceeding. The allegation being clearly to the effect that the member of the partnership was acting for the partnership and within the scope of its business in making the alleged agreement, the partnership would be bound thereby, and upon a failure of the members to pay over any funds held by the partnership in contravention of such agreement, they would be subject to a money rule. Moreover, the amendment further refers to “the agreement of respondents to fix” such fee of associate counsel at not more than the amount stated, and also states that the discussion and statements with regard to such fee were “in the presence of respondents.” From these additional averments it appears that the other member of the defendant partnership would be bound, not only because the undertaking of his partner was'within the scope of the partnership business, but for the additional reason that it appears that, by his presence he participated in the alleged agreement and understanding.
5. According to the allegations of the petition, the moneys in question being now held in the State and county of the suit, and part of the litigation incident to their collection having been prosecuted in the superior court of that county, in which county the defendants resided, the petition was not subject to demurrer, on the ground that the court was without jurisdiction to entertain the proceeding because the moneys -collected were actually paid over in Delaware, where most of the prolonged litigation was had. See Phillips & Crew Co. v. Jones, 139 Ga. 160, 163-165 (76 S. E. 1019), in effect overruling Wilkinson County v. Lindsey, 106 Ga. 25 (31 S. E. 792.)
6. The petition with the amendments which were allowed without objection, and the proffered amendment which was erroneously disallowed, sufficiently met all proper grounds of the special demurrers. Under the preceding rulings, the court erred in dis
Judgment reversed.