18 Fla. 60 | Fla. | 1881
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action of indebitatus assumpsit to recover money paid upon a judgment or order subsequently reversed upon appeal. The plaintiff in its declaration avers: That the defendant on the 27th day of July, A. D. 1876, procured an order from the Circuit Court for the Fourth Judicial Circuit to Joseph H. Durkee, then master in charge and possession of the Florida Central Railroad, under and by virtue of a decree in the suit of the State of Florida vs. the plaintiff and others, ordering the said Joseph H. Durkee, as such master and receiver, to pay to the said defendant the sum of six thousand dollars on account of fees claimed to be due the defendant for services as solicitor in said cause, upon which said order the said Durkee, as such master and receiver of the moneys of the said company, did then and there pay to the defendant three thousand dollars; and the said plaintiff, being aggrieved by said order, appealed therefrom to the Supreme Court of the State of Florida, which appeal coming on to be heard the said Supreme Court set aside and reversed said order to pay said amount of six thousand dollars to the defendant, whereupon a right accrued to the plaintiff to institute suit against the defendant to recover the amount of three thousand dollars, whereupon
The defendant filed several pleas. We examine them in their order. The first was substantially: That in June, A. I). 1870, as authorized by the provisions of several acts of the Legislature of Florida, the State of Florida issued and delivered to the Jacksonville, Pensacola and Mobile Railroad Company four thousand bonds of the State of Florida, of the denomination of one thousand dollars each, receiving from said company three thousand bonds of that company, and one thousand bonds of the Florida Central Railroad Company of one thousand dollars each, bearing eight per cent, interest, in exchange for the said State bonds; that the J., P. & M. Railroad Company sold agreater part of said bonds ; that on the 20th day of March, A. L>. 1872, the State brought a suit in the Circuit Court for Duval county against the said J., P. & M. R. R. Company, et al. ; that afterwards, on June 22, 1872, by means of an amended complaint, the plaintiff in this cause, the Florida Central Railroad Company, was made a defendant; that said company denied its power to issue its said bonds, or that said bonds were a lien upon its property ; that the State prosecuted this action to enforce the lien upon its property authorized by the laws, named as security for the payment of its bonds, as well as against the J., P. & M. R. R. Company, to enforce a like lien; that a judgment was obtained in said suit against the said J., P. & M. R. R. Company for six hundred thousand' dollars interest accrued on its bonds, and that a judgment was recovered on the 18th November, A. D. 1875, against the plaintiff for the sum of three hundred and sixty-eight thousand dollars on
To this and the other pleas which we notice hereafter there was a demurrer.
The questions discussed upon the demurrer to this plea arise more from a difference in its construction than from a conflict in opinion as to what is the law applicable to the facts when ascertained.
We think the plea, construed with reference to the declaration, presents this case : that the defendant, representing the State of Florida as attorney and solicitor, recovered, on the 18th of November, 1875, a judgment against the plaintiff corporation for the sum of three hundred and sixty-eight thousand dollars, on account of interest due on bonds of the plaintiff coi’poration held by the State; that under this judgment a master was directed to take possession of the property of the plaintiff, to sell the same, and to receive the incomes from its management; that the judgment provided that the plaintiff should be entitled to a credit for all moneys that should come to the hands of the master ; that on the 27th of July, A. D. 1876, the master, having funds then in his possession realized by the management of
The question here is, can the plaintiff corporation, under these circumstances, recover this money thus paid defendant for services as attorney and counsellor anterior to the reversal of the judgment and order? In contemplation of law, the moneys in the hands of the master at the time they were paid were moneys applicable to the payment of the judgment in favor of the State, the judgment being then in full operation, and the attorney and counsellor had a lien upon them for the amount of his claim for services in favor of the judgment plaintiff'. The judgment being in force, this application of the funds was legal under the then existing circumstances. It was an application of money which might be properly appropriated to the payment of the sum due the judgment plaintiff, to the debt of such judgment plaintiff, in such manner as upon a reversal of the judgment the remedy of the plaintiff corporation here, if there was any, was by a writ of restitution against the plaintiff in the original suit, with or without a scire facias, as the case may be, and not an action of indebitatus assumpfi against the attorney to whose claim for services it had been legally applied before that time. The judgment plaintiff has applied money adjudged at the time to be applicable to the payment of her own claim to the payment of an un
The Supreme Court of the United States, speaking of this subject, says, (6 Pet., 8): “ The reversal of the judgment gives a new right or cause of action, against the parties to the judgment, and creates a legal obligation on their part to restore what the other party has lost by reason of the erroneous judgment; and as between the parties to the judgment, there is all the privity necessary to sustain and enforce such right, but as to strangers there is no such privity.”
The presumption from this record, upon the face of the declaration and this plea, is that the proper method was adopted to have this debt of the State of Florida for services of her attorney and counsellor paid from the funds in the hands of the master and applicable to the claim of the State. The rule upon this subject in chancery is that “ when a fund coming to his client is in court, the solicitor may present a-petition for the taxation of his bill and for payment of it out of the fund.” Dan’l Chy. Prac. and Pleadg., 5 Edition, 1845.
According to the authorities defining with accuracy this proceeding and a suit in equity, there is such a difference between them that there may be an application of moneys by such proceeding in the pending suit and yet not a recovery in a bill for an account. 9 Sim., 583, 588.
"While in the time of Lord Hardwicke the rule may have
The application of the funds here was legal and according to the judgment and order, which had not been superseded. These positions are clear, and we see no- other question in the case except the one of privity. Was' the defendant here such a stranger to the decree or judgment as prevents the existence of such privity between him and the plaintiff as is necessary to maintain this action of ■ indebitatus assumpsit? We think no such privity exists or exr isted. His claim was in no way any part of the foundation of the judgment against the Florida Central Railroad Company, nor did he, under the averments of the plea, make any claim against that company.
He was paid from money in gremio legis applicable tb a judgment and decree between his client and the plaintiff here.
No question between the parties to this suit not already determined was necessary to be considered in the hearing of his petition seeking payment out of these funds. The action of the court simply sanctioned and directed an appropriation of funds applicable to the claim of his debtor to him her creditor. The attorney of the State did not assume any other or new relation to the Florida Central Railroad Company than he had occupied before. He claimed," as attorney of the State, by virtue of a claim against the State, and while it is true that this act as attorney of the State was to enure to his own benefit, still this benefit resulted directly and solely from his relation to the State* and
A supersedeas is necessary to prevent such action. That would have stopped any proceeding of the court or its officers under the decree. If there is no supersedeas, then action of the court, in accordance with the decree, if the decree be afterwards reversed, can only be remedied by proceeding against the parties.
These conclusions are sustained by the principles announced in the following cases: 3 N. Y., 329; 20 N. Y., 306; 6 Pet., 15 to 19; 14 Ga., 89; 10 Wall., 494; 2 Mon., 972; 28 N. Y., 237; 18 N. Y., 371.
The other pleas are pleas on equitable grounds under the sixty-ninth section of Chapter 1096, Laws, being an act to amend the pleading and practice in the courts of this State. A plea under this statute is applicable only to a case at law in which, if judgment were obtained against the defendant, he would be entitled to relief on equitable grounds. Day’s Com. Law. Procedure, 328, and cases cited. It is obvious that all such equitable pleas have vitality and effect according to the case made at law. To be effective not only must a case at law be made against the defendant, but an equity which would be operative to give title to relief against the particular judgment to be given in that case must be disclosed by the plea.
The first plea here on equitable grounds recites first the facts set up in the plea just disposed of, and that the plain
Whether the plaintiff here is entitled to credit upon the decree in the case- of J. E. Sehutte and others against it for this three thousand dollars, or whether the State, as trustee, would be entitled to a credit for that sum in its account with the cestui que trust as an amount disbursed by her in the management of the trust, are questions which in our judgment have no place here, as they are questions with which the defendant here has no concern as equitable defences, except in the event of his liability to judgment at law.
The third plea on equitable grounds recites substantially the matter of the first plea, and proposes to set off a debt due by the plaintiff to the State, as trustee, against the three thousand dollars claimed tó be due it by the defendant, the agent and attorney of the trustee. What has been said of the second plea in principle disposes of this plea. The first plea being, in our opinion, a good defence, the judgment, to the extent that it overrules the demurrer, must be affirmed. The plaintiff, however, upon remanding the case may, under the practice in this State, have leave to reply to the plea upon showing a meritorious replication, to be filed in twenty days after the filing of the mandate of this court in the Circuit Court, in which ease the court may set aside the final judgment upon the de. murrer, and proceed in the case according to law, otherwise the final judgment to stand affirmed.
Judgment affirmed with qualification stated.