189 A.D. 709 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1919
This action is brought by the plaintiff, an attorney and counselor-at-Iaw, to recover for alleged legal services which he claims he rendered to the defendant, pursuant to employ
The defendant, Gladys Mary Moore, or Mary Pickford, as she is popularly known, is a moving picture actress of prominence. In 1915 the defendant was under contract with a corporation known as the Mary Pickford Famous Players Company whereby she displayed her talents as an actress in posing for and in the manufacture and production of moving pictures. Under her contract, which expired in December, 1915, she received a salary of $2,000 per week. The corporation with whom defendant was thus under contract was managed by one Adolph Zukor. Under an oral arrangement, which appears from the evidence to have been somewhat indefinite, the defendant continued in the employ of the corporation managed by Zukor during the early part of the year 1916 at a salary of $4,000 per week. However, it appears from the evidence that in March of that year the defendant had been the recipient of propositions and offers for her services of compensation in excess of the $4,000 per week which she was then receiving from the Zukor corporation. The defendant claimed the right to terminate the oral arrangement under which she was then acting and to enter into other contracts for her services. On March eighteenth she made a tentative agreement in writing with one Hampton whereby she was to receive a salary for her services of $7,000 per week, but owing to the failure of Hampton to furnish security for performance on his part, such contract never appears to have materialized.
It is claimed by the plaintiff that in such situation the defendant, first, through her mother, who acted as her business manager, and, afterwards, personally, sought- to employ the plaintiff as her counsel with a view of avoiding obligation upon the oral contract with the Zukor corporation with whom she had been under contract, and also with a view of avoiding any obligation under the tentative offer which she had made to Hampton, which had not been consummated. These negotiations, whereby plaintiff claims his services were sought and obtained by the defendant, occurred in March, 1916, according to plaintiff’s testimony. At that time plaintiff had recently been admitted to practice as an attorney and counselor-
At the close of the plaintiff’s case the learned trial court dismissed plaintiff’s complaint upon the theory that plaintiff, at the time of his alleged employment by defendant, represented the Mutual Film Corporation, whose interests, as the court apprehended, were adverse to those of the defendant, and that, therefore, the plaintiff was in no position, ethically, to serve the defendant and act as her counsel in matters where he was under employment by those adversely interested.
The law seems to be well settled that an attorney may not serve two masters and may not represent adverse interests or undertake to discharge conflicting duties, and that if he attempts to do so he is not entitled to compensation from either party. It was upon the assumption that the evidence presented by plaintiff in support of his cause of action showed that he was attempting to serve adverse interests that the learned trial court dismissed plaintiff’s complaint. The court, in reaching its determination in this respect, said, in part: “ It'is my view that the testimony shows it is quite obvious that Mr. Field, while purporting to represent the defendant, Mrs. Moore, was in fact, tied to Mr. Freuler and his company, the Mutual Film Company, by ties so close as to prevent him from giving disinterested advice, the advice that an attorney ought to give to his client, to Mrs. Moore. Of course, the mere fact that at one and the same time he represented two different clients would not make it improper for him to act for both. It is only where the nature of his work or advice is such that he would find himself in the equivocal, anomalous position of aiding one as against the other, or of being compelled to choose between them, that the dual service would be improper. In other words, there must be a conflict of interest before it becomes unethical for a lawyer to represent both. But the moment that conflict, or probability of conflict, arises, or is seen, he must cleave to one, and give him the best that is in him, which, of course, means that he must abandon the other, giving the other suitable opportunity to employ a new attorney.”
The law, as thus stated by the learned trial court, was
The judgment appealed from should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide event.
Clarke, P. J., Latjghlin, Smith and Philbin, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event.