222 F. 249 | 2d Cir. | 1915
The petitioner asks, that he may be declared to have a lien upon the decree in favor of the complainant herein and the proceeds thereof for the reasonable value of his services as counsel; that the decree be vacated, and a master be appointed to take proofs on the subject and report to the court.
The bill was filed in December, 1902, and the petitioner retained as counsel for complainant in March. Edward C. D'avidson, the solicitor of record, conducted the case, consulting with the petitioner from time to time down to the date of final hearing, May 6, 1913, when both solicitor and counsel participated in the argument before Judge Hazel, who entered a decree for the complainant. An appeal from this decree was taken by the defendant, and preparation for the argument made almost entirely by the petitioner on account of the illness of the solicitor. January 5, 1914, the case came on for argument in the Circuit Court of Appeals, was argued by the petitioner, and the decree of the
As between the complainant and the petitioner, the question is whether counsel has any lien upon the decree and its proceeds. We cannot agree that the petitioner, as counsel, has a charging lien for the reasonable value of his services upon the decree and the proceeds thereof which equity will enforce, without regard to statute or possession of property. The cases relied upon, when examined, do not sustain this contention. In Barcus v. Gates et al. (C. C.) 130 Fed. 364, it is quite, plain that, although Barcus is spoken of in the opinion as counsel, he was actually attorney. In Dodge v. Schell (C. C.) 12 Fed. 515, the petitioner, though a custom house broker, was treated as an attorney, and the court made it a condition of the substitution of new attorneys for the plaintiffs that his fee should be paid. In Frink v. McComb (C. C.) 60 Fed. 486, the award seems to have been made to solicitors, though they are sometimes spoken of in the opinion as counsel. In Buell v. Kanawha (D. C.) 201 Fed. 762, the solicitors for the complainant also acted as counsel for the receivers. They were allowed no compensation as attorneys, for complainant on the ground that he had created no fund, and they were denied compensation for services to the receivers out of the fund because it belonged to prior claimants, viz., mortgagees. In Tuttle v. Claflin (C. C.) 86 Fed. 964, and 88 Fed. 122, 31 C. C. A. 419, the situation was one of a fund created by one Wooster who was by agreement entitled to his costs and expenses. Judge Dacombe held that it made no difference whether the counsel fees which he incurred as part of his expenses were paid to him or to the counsel directly. This is quite in line with what the court said in Central R. R. Co. v. Pettus, 113 U. S. 116, 5 Sup. Ct. 387, 28 L. Ed. 915, as to a fund created by intervening creditors:
“It is clear that, within the principles announced in Trustees v. Greenough [105 U. S. 527, 26 L. Ed. 1157], Branch, Sons & Co. and their co-complainants are entitled to be allowed, out of the property thus' brought under the control-of the court, for all expenses properly incurred in the preparation and conduct of the suit, including such reasonable attorney’s fees as were fairly earned in effecting the result indicated by the final decree. And when an allowance to the complainant is proper on account, of solicitors’ fees, it may be made directly to the solicitors themselves, without any application by their immediate client.”
Counsel for petitioner attached much significance to the fact that he signed the bill as counsel, in accordance with old rule in equity 24, which reads:
“Every bill shall contain the signature of counsel annexed to it, which shall be considered as an affirmation on his part that, upon the instructions given to him and the case laid before him, there is good ground for the suit, in the manner in which it is framed.”
The order is affirmed.