delivered the opinion of the court.
Attorney John A. Bloomingston instituted suit in be,half of Lawrence Goldberg, a minor, by Esther Goldberg, his mother and next friend, against Morris Perl-mutter, for personal injuries suffered by said minor. Sometime prior to January 5, 1940, Mr. Bloomingston effected a sеttlement of the claim for $1,625. On January 5, 1940, Esther Goldberg filed a petition in this cause in which she prayed that attorney S. Yale Fischman “be required to sign a release of attorney’s lien in said cause.” The respondent, Fisсhman, filed an answer in which he alleged inter alia “that the defendant herein [Perlmutter] refused ... to make said settlement until there had been an adjudication of your respondent’s lien for services” and prayed “that an order of court be entered allowing to your respondent . . . $406.25 as and for attorney’s fees as attorney for the guardian of such minor’s estate.” On January 24, 1940, an order was entered by the trial court in which it was adjudged that “the respondent, S. Yale Fischman, has no attorney’s lien against the funds to be derived out of this case.” This appeal is from that order.
The facts are undisputed. On November 13, 1937, Lawrence Goldberg, the minor son of Isador Goldberg and Esther Goldberg, sustained injuries by reason of having been struck by an automobile owned and operated by Morris Perlmutter, the defendant herein. On November 15, 1937, the minor’s father retained and employed the respondent, Fischman, as an attorney to prosecute the minor’s claim on a contingent basis of 25 per cent of the amount of any judgment or settlement recovered or received. Thereaftеr, with the approval of the father of said minor, the respondent procured the appointment of the Trust Company of Chicago as guardian of the minor and himself as attorney for such guardian. On November 16, 1937, the respondent prepared a notice of attorney’s lien, which he caused to be served upon the defendant by forwarding same to the latter by registered mail, said notice of attorney’s lien having been received by defendant on November 17, 1937. On November 17, 1937, respondent received the following letter on the stationery of attorney JohnE. Bloomingston:
“November 16, 1937.
“Mr. Yale Fischman,
100 N. LaSalle St.,
Chicago, Ill.
“Dear Mr. Fischman:
“My wife, Esther Goldberg, has already retained John A. Bloomingston to рrosecute the claim of our son, Lawrence Goldberg for injuries received by him on November 13, 1937. Mrs. Goldberg signed a contract with Mr. Bloomingston on Monday morning, having been referred to him by our family physician, Dr. Lifschutz.
“Under the circumstances I am requesting that you do nothing further in our behalf.
“Yours very truly,
(signed) Isador Goldberg.”
Later the same day Esther G-oldberg, the mother of the minor, called at respondent’s office and asked him to retire from the case. No adequate reason having been advanced for his withdrawal, Fischman refused to withdraw as attorney but he was not permitted to participate in the prosecution of the minor’s claim. Thereafter, as heretofore stated, attorney Bloomingston filed suit upon the minor’s claim against the defendant, Perlmutter, and subsequently effected a settlement of same for $1,625. Respondent rendered no legal services in connection with thе prosecution or settlement of the minor’s claim because he was instructed not to do so by said minor’s parents after they had employed attorney Bloomingston.
It has been repeatedly held that a сontract by a minor or by his next friend employing an attorney to prosecute a suit for the minor and agreeing to pay him a reasonable sum as his fee is valid and enforcible. In Haj v. American Bottle Co.,
“We are of opinion that, under the special circumstаnces here disclosed, this suit comes within the purview of necessaries for the minor, and that the minor could make a valid contract, and so could his next friend, whereby to hire an attorney to prosecute the suit and agree to pay him a reasonable compensation, and if a compensation was named in the contract which did not strike the conscience of a court called upon to enforce it as unconscionable, it would be enforceable as to amount unless it appeared from the proof that it was an unreasonable amount. Therefore, we hold that this contract by the minor аnd his next friend, by which he employed Conway to prosecute this suit, was valid. ’ ’ (To the same effect are Burns v. Illinois Cent. R. Co.,190 Ill. App. 191 (Abst.), and Zazove v. Minneapolis, St. Paul & Sault Ste. Marie Ry. Co.,218 Ill. App. 534 .)
As already shown, neither the fact that the father of the minor entered into the contract with resрondent whereby the latter was to prosecute the minor’s claim for 25 per cent of the amount recovered nor the reasonableness of the compensation specified in the contraсt of employment is disputed.
A client unquestionably has the right to discharge his attorney at will and engage another, but where he exercises such right without good cause and thus renders it impossible for such first attorney to pеrform his contract of employment he is bound to compensate the first attorney in accordance with his contract with him. Discussing this question in Morris v. Ekstrom,
“It is well settled that where an attorney is employed to perform legal services and his client puts it out of his power to comply with the contract, as by compromising without the attorney’s knowledge or consent, he is entitled to compensation for his services in comрliance with the terms of the contract. Millard v. County of Richland,13 Ill. App. 527 , 534; Town of Mt. Vernon v. Patton,94 Ill. 65 ; Barnes v. Barnes, 225, Ill. App. 68.”
In Caruso v. Pelting,
“Nor are the defendants in a position to contend that petitioner should receive only the reasonable value of the services rendered because the Attorney’s Lien Act provides that the attorney shall have a lien ‘for the amount of any fee which may have been agreed uрon by and between such attorneys and their clients, or, in the absence of such agreement, for a reasonable fee, for the services of such attorneys rendered or to be rendered. ’ The amount of the fee having been agreed upon between the petitioner and his client, petitioner is entitled to the amount specified in his contract, of which the defendants were notified.”
There is no question in this cаse but that respondent complied with the provisions of the Attorney’s Lien Act (par. 14, ch. 13, Ill. Rev. Stat. 1939 [Jones Ill. Stats. Ann. 9.13].) Did respondent’s discharge by the parents of the minor, admittedly without cause, deprive him of his statutory attornеy’s lien? We are impelled to hold that it did not. “A client cannot by discharging an attorney, except for good cause, deprive him of his lien.” Tulka v. Chicago City Ry. Co.,
For the reasons stated herein the order or judgment of the circuit court is reversed and the cause is remanded with directions that the respondent, Fischman, be adjudged to have a valid, enforceable attorney’s lien against any amount recovered on or received in' settlement of the minor’s claim and that such further proceedings be had as are not inconsistent with the views herein expressed.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded with directions.
Friend, P. J., and Scanlan, J., concur.
