161 Mich. 181 | Mich. | 1910
The case of Foley v. Railway Co., was before this court in 157 Mich. 67 (121 N. W. 257). Another phase of the case was before the court in Grand Rapids, etc., R. Co. v. Cheboygan Circuit Judge, 159 Mich. 210 (123 N. W. 591). The original suit was brought by Foley to recover damages for personal injuries. Plaintiff recovered a verdict and judgment for $10,000, which judgment was reversed, and a new trial ordered in the case> first above cited, May 26, 1909. Thereafter, and on December 22, 1909, the relator effected a settlement of Foley’s claim for damages. The agreement of settlement, and the memorandum agreement made contemporaneously are as follows:
“State of Michigan.
“In the Circuit Court for the County of Cheboygan.
“James Foley,
“ Plaintiff,
v.
“The Grand Rapids & In- ’ diana Railway Company,
“Defendant.
“I, James Foley, plaintiff in this cause, do hereby acknowledge the payment to me by the Grand Rapids & Indiana Railway Company of the sum of five thousand one hundred forty dollars, in full settlement and satisfaction of all claims, demands, damages, and cause of action which I now have or might hereafter have against said railway company on account of personal injuries sustained by me on or about the 9th day of September, 1906, at*184 Kegomic, Michigan, when I was run over when getting off a train on which I had ridden from Petoskey. The suit begun by me against the said railway company, and now pending in said circuit court, is hereby discontinued and dismissed without costs to either party, and an order accordingly shall be entered on filing this stipulation.
“Dated, December 22, 1909.
“James Foley.
“Witnessed by
“B. T. Halstead,
“John Fochtman.
“State of Michigan, )
“County of Emmet, j ss:
“On this 22á day of December, 1909, before me, a notary public in and for said county 'of Emmet, personally appeared James Foley, to me personally known, and known to me to be the same person named in and who signed the foregoing instrument and acknowledged that he had executed the same of his own free act and deed.
“B. T. Halstead,
“Notary Public in and for Emmet County, Michigan. [Notarial Seal.]
“My commission expires February 17, 1918.”
“ Memoranda of agreement made and concluded, this 22d day of December, A. D. 1909, by and between James Foley of Kegomic, Mich., party of the first part, and the Grand Rapids & Indiana Railway Company, a corporation, party of the second part.
“The said party of the second part as part consideration for settlement, this day made by and between the parties hereto, hereby covenants and agrees with said first party to pay to the attorneys of said first party as compensation for their fees and disbursements for and on behalf of said first party, an amount not to exceed the sum of one thous- and dollars ($1,000).
“In witness whereof the said parties aforesaid have hereunto set their respective signatures in duplicate the day and year above written.
“G. R. & I. Ry. Co.,
“By C. W. Jones.”
The law firm of Benjamin & Quay had been the attorneys of record for Foley, and had tried the case in the circuit, and had argued the cases in this court. They
“This agreement made and entered into this 17th day of February, 1908, by and between James Foley of Petoskey, Michigan, of the first part, and Benjamin & Quay, of Cheboygan, Mich., of second part:
“Whereas, said first party has this day retained second parties as attorneys to begin suit against Grand Rapids & Indiana Railway Co., a corporation, for personal injuries received by said first party during September, 1906, it is hereby agreed that said second parties, as their fees, shall receive one-half of whatever judgment or settlement they shall obtain from said railroad company, and in case first party does not recover judgment or obtain a settlement, then second parties shall receive no pay for such services as they may render in said cause; and second parties shall have a lien on any judgment or money that may be obtained from said railroad company. First party to pay all witness fees, second party all other clerk and county fees.
“James Foley. [Seal.]
“Benjamin & Quay. [Seal.]”
It is undisputed that on June 11, 1909 the said attorneys for Foley wrote and mailed a letter to James H. Campbell, general counsel for relator, relating to a rumored attempt of relator to effect a settlement of Foley’s claim with him direct, in which the following language was used:
“ Also we wish to notify you that we have a lien upon any money which Mr. Foley may obtain, either by judgment or settlement, for our services rendered, and in case your company settles direct with Mr. Foley without our knowledge or consent, we shall have to hold you responsible for the amount of our fees.”
It is conceded that Mr. Campbell received this letter by due course of mail, and replied to the same on June 25, 1909. Again, on November 27,1909, De Vere Hall, Esq., who had been employed to assist Messrs. Benjamin & Quay in the retrial of said cause, wrote a letter to Mr. Campbell, in which he said, among other things:
*186 “ I am advised that your claim agent called upon the plaintiff and offered to pay him $5,000.00 in full settlement of his claim, telling him that if he accepted this amount he would be under no obligations to pay his attorneys anything, and that it would be as much as he would getoutof it if he obtained another judgment for $10,000.00, and that if he did not accept, the case would be dragged along in the courts for the next four or five years. I am also advised that another offer of $6,000.00 is to be made to him by some of your claim agents, and I write you this that you may be advised of the situation.
“ It is apparent from the record of the former case that the attorneys for Mr. Foley have been representing his interests faithfully, and that they are entitled to full consideration, and I presume that it will be unnecessary to give the matter of attempted settlement any further consideration by them, and that if they are rightly advised, your claim agents will deal only with such attorneys.
“ I have no doubt that the attorneys for Mr. Foley have an arrangement with him under which they are to be paid a portion of the sum secured, either by settlement or by suit, and that the proposed settlement, if effected, except through them, would ignore their rights entirely.
“ Will'you please give this matter your earliest attention and advise me.”
On November 30, 1909, Mr. Campbell replied to this letter, and said in part:
“ It has always been my practice to deal only with attorneys in cases placed in their hands. * * * In writing Benjamin & Quay I made an offer of settlement, and wrote that if we could agree upon an amount, I would let judgment be entered for that sum, and pay it into court, or to the attorneys direct. We had some correspondence.
“ They wanted $10,000, and later wrote that they would take $9,000, if paid within fifteen days. I wrote them that the company would not pay that, and asked them if they had any better offer to make. That was about four months ago. I have had no reply.
‘ ‘ I have had no thought of doing anything that would deprive Benjamin & Quay of a fee in the case. Our claim agent has been in Petoskey several times within the last month or six weeks upon other matters. I said nothing to him about the Foley case and he tells me that*187 lie had nothing to say about it when he was there, and did not see Foley.
“ I am still willing to make a reasonable settlement of the case; and shall be glad to have you say what in your judgment should be paid by the company upon a settlement. My own view of it is that if $3,500.00 was paid to Foley, and $1,000 to Benjamin & Quay, with $500 to you, making $5,000 in all, it would be about right.”
On December 10, 1909, Benjamin & Quay wrote Mr. Campbell referring to the correspondence between Mr. Hall and Mr. Campbell, and stating that they would accept $10,500, and nothing less, and that Mr. Campbell could have 20 days in which to take the matter up with the company. This seems to have ended the correspondence upon the subject of a settlement. Thereafter the case was settled with Foley as above set forth. On January 3, 1910, the said attorney for the railroad company paid into said court said $1,000, and the clerk’s fees, and caused notice of a motion to dismiss said cause without costs to either party, to be served upon the said attorneys for said Foley, based upon the said settlement agreement which had been filed in said cause and the affidavit of James H. Campbell. Said motion was to be heard before the respondent on January 7th. Whereupon the said Benjamin & Quay, as attorneys for said Foley, served and filed a counter motion to have the said settlement agreement and stipulation for discontinuance stricken from the files of said cause, and for an order permitting said plaintiff’s attorneys to proceed with the trial of this cause for the purpose of determining what amount of fees they were entitled to. Said motion was noticed to be heard before the respondent at the same time and place as defendant’s motion. Said motion of plaintiff’s attorneys was based upon the records and files in the cause, and the affidavit of Maxwell W. Benjamin, which is set out in this record. Affidavits of James H. Campbell and C. W. Jones were read in opposition to the motion of said plaintiff’s attorneys. They also appear in this record.
The said two motions were heard by the respondent at
(1) He found that the said Benjamin & Quay, attorneys for said plaintiff, James Foley, had a legal and existing contract for their compensation and fees to be paid them by plaintiff, for their services and expenditures in said cause, and that said agreement constituted a lien of 50 per cent, upon any judgment or settlement that the said Benjamin & Quay might obtain for said plaintiff, in said cause.
(2) That the said defendant had due and legal notice of said special contract for services, and the said lien of said Benjamin & Quay.
(3) That the settlement, made direct between James Foley, plaintiff, and the defendant, was collusive, and made with the intent to defraud said Benjamin & Quay, plaintiff’s attorneys, out of their just and legal costs, expenditures, and fees, to which they would have been lawfully entitled if settlement of said cause had been made through them, or if they had proceeded with the trial of said cause and obtained a judgment.
(4) It was ordered that the said motion of defendant for an order dismissing said cause be denied.
(5) It was further ordered that the said stipulation of settlement and discontinuance, dated December 22, 1909, and filed in said cause December 21, 1909, be stricken from the files in said cause.
(6) It was further ordered that Benjamin & Quay, attorneys for plaintiff, be permitted to proceed with the trial of said cause in the name of James Foley, plaintiff, for the purpose of determining the amount of their fees, under and by virtue of their special contract with said James Foley.
After a motion to vacate the above order was duly made and denied, the relator filed this petition for mandamus. It prays that the writ of mandamus issue to the respondent, requiring him to vacate and set aside the said order of January 7th, and to enter an order withholding an order dismissing the case until the claim of plaintiff’s attorneys against the defendant for their services and dis
“We wish to notify you that we have a lien upon any money which Mr. Foley may obtain, either by judgment or settlement, for our services rendered, and in case your company settles direct with Mr. Foley without our knowledge or consent, we shall have to hold you responsible for the amount of our fees.”
In Young v. Dearborn, 27 N. H. 324, it is held that, if a party obtains a discharge of an action under such circumstances as ought to have put him on inquiry as to the claim of the attorney, the discharge will be void as to the attorney as it would be after actual notice of his lien. If the party defendant acts in the face of circumstances which are sufficient to put him on inquiry, he acts contrary to good faith, and at his peril. Defendant knew that plaintiff’s attorneys could have no lien before judgment, except by express agreement. We think that notice of lien on amount of settlement was equivalent to saying there was an agreement. It was not necessary that plaintiff’s attorneys should apprise the relator of all and the exact terms of their special contract in order to put it upon inquiry.
What would have been the effect had plaintiff’s attorneys served a copy of their agreement of February 17, 1908, upon the defendant, relator ? A careful examination of such agreement will show that there is nothing in its terms to prohibit Foley from settling his case with the defendant. It says:
“It is hereby agreed that said second parties, as their fees, shall receive one-half of whatever judgment or settlement "they shall obtain from the said railroad company, and in case first party does not recover judgment, or obtain a settlement, then second parties shall receive no pay for such services as they may render in said cause; and second parties shall have a lien on any judgment or money that may be obtained from said railroad company. First party to pay all witness fees, second party all other clerk and county fees.”
We think that here is a clear recognition of the right of Foley to settle said cause, but not to the prejudice of the lien of one-half thereof. In their letter to Mr. Campbell of June 11, 1909, Benjamin & Quay say:
*191 “We wish to notify you that we have a lien upon any money which Mr. Foley may obtain, either by judgment or settlement, for our services rendered, and in case your company settles direct with Mr. Foley without our knowledge or consent, we shall have to hold you responsible for the amount of our fees.”
Manifestly, there is nothing here to prohibit a direct settlement with Mr. Foley, but there is notice that defendant will be held responsible for the amount of the attorneys’ fees.
“This procedure has been designated as clumsy, and it has been said that it was a device of the courts, not of the legislature, and sprang from the necessity of providing some remedy against fraudulent settlements. The neces*192 sity is no less at this time in Indiana than it was in England years ago, when the procedure was first followed.”
In our opinion the proper practice will require the plaintiff’s attorneys in said suit to present to the court in proper form, by petition or otherwise, their alleged agreement and their claim thereunder. The defendant in that suit will, under Circuit Court Rule 9, be permitted to give notice of its alleged settlement agreement, in the nature of a plea puis darrein continuance.
(а) Upon the trial it will devolve upon the plaintiff’s attorneys to show that their agreement with Eoley was duly made, and was in good faith.
(б) It will devolve upon the said defendant to prove the making of the alleged settlement agreement with Eoley, and that the settlement was made in accordance with its terms.
(c) Should both agreements be established by evidence, plaintiff’s attorneys will be entitled to recover, in the name of said plaintiff, the amount of their fees as shown by their said agreement with Eoley, upon the basis of said settlement.
(d) Should the said plaintiff’s attorneys establish their agreement with said Eoley as valid and binding, and should the defendant fail to show the making of said settlement agreement, and a settlement with Foley thereunder, then and in such case the plaintiff’s attorneys will be permitted to prosecute the said original action, and prove the plaintiff’s case, as though there had been no attempted settlement, and recover their contract share of any damages awarded.
(e) Should the plaintiff’s attorneys fail to prove and establish as bona fide their alleged agreement with said Eoley, then they will not be entitled to recover any sum whatever.
It follows logically from what we have already said, that the finding of the respondent, marked above “1,” wherein he found that the agreement of said plaintiff’s attorneys with said Eoley was legal and binding, should
That part of said order, marked above “6,” will be so modified as to permit an issue to be framed as above indicated. The remainder of said findings and order will stand. We have examined with care the authorities cited by counsel, but we refrain from quoting them here, for the reason that we find authority for the course here indicated in our own decisions.
The writ will issue in the modified form above indicated, but without costs.