111 Ky. 72 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1901
Reversing.
Appellees are lawyers, practicing under the firm name stated, at Henderson, Ky. Appellant, Mrs. Helen Henry, and her sisters Elizabeth Spidel and Isabella Gayle, lived at Henderson, Ky., and appear to have been people of quite moderate circumstances, and had always been so. Appellant was about 63 years eld. A contract of employment, executed by appellant and her sisters, retaining the legal services of appellee firm in the matter of recovering the interest of these women in an estate in Nova Scotia in which they were entitled to participate, was executed January 23, 1899, by which appellees were to receive a sum equal to 35 per cent, of the sum recovered. Shortly after the signing of the contract, appellant and her coheirs, conceiving that they had been overreached in the matter by the attorney representing appellee firm, notified appellees that their services were no longer required, and they were dismissed from further .attention to the matter of the estate. This letter of dismissal was as follows: “Messrs. Yance & Yance — Gentlemen: That there may be no possible misunderstanding between us in the future in regard to your employment as our attorney as the heirs and distributees of the late Alexander Macfarlane, dec’d, of Wallace, Cumberland Co., Nova Scotia, -and to make positive our intention in the matter herewith, and in emphasis of what we said to you on last Thursday, the 6th ultimo, withdraw all authority under the writing heretofore given you; believing that you took advantage of our ignorance of the facts, and obtained an unjust contract, which no court will uphold or sanction. We have advised the executors of our late uncle Alexander Macfarlane, dec’d, that any authority or attorneyship to you in that behalf has been wholly withdrawn, and that you have no authority to
This appeal presents these questions: (1) Did the facts proven prima facie sustain the plea of fraud? (2) If they did not sustain the plea, had the clients the right to discharge their attorneys at any stage of the proceedings ? (3) Was appellees’ cause of action on the contract, or for damages for a breach of it, or upon quantum meruit?
The estate of the decedent wais something more than $129,000, it seems. The services actually rendered by appellees in the matter before notice of appellant’s renunciation of the contract consisted in writing a letter to the' California Macfarlane, which was returned for lack of proper address; a letter to Dun’s Agency, by which the fact of the decedent’s death, the value of his estate, and the address of his executors, and the fact that he died intestate, were stated; then a letter of inquiry to the executors. It appears that appellant and her sisters had lived nearly all their lives in the city of Henderson, and their sons were in business there, and, it would seem, all were
2. The relationship of attorney and client is so peculiarly one of confidence and reliance, that it would not do to require a party to continue in his service one whom he distrusts, or whose capacity he no longer believes in, nor to permit the attorney, under such circumstances, to continue the relationship, where the lack of confidence would seriously impair his efficiency, and interfere Avith his full opportunity to serve the party and the court as his office requires. That the client has the right to discharge his attorney at any time, with of without cause, even in a "case where a contingent fee has been agreed upon, can not be well doubted. Mechem. Ag., 856. If the discharge is for cause, the question of fee may become eliminated, or give to the client even a right to an action over. If the dis
8. Where a contract of employment has been fairly made ' between an attorney and one thereby becoming his client, and before any services are rendered by the attorney he is discharged by the client, without cause, from further connection with the matter, the attorney must look to an action for a breach of the contract. A declaration upon the contract as if constructively performed is not gbod, and, we believe, is against Goth reason and the weight of authority. This is likewise true where there has been such partial performance as entitles the attorney to look only to an action on quantum meruit,. as above indicated. The measure of damages may be, and frequently in such cases is, difficult to establish. That is equally true in many other contracts. As to what wrould be the resulting damages from such breach, where the action is for a breach of the contract, would necessarily depend upon the circumstances of the particular case. Carey v. Gnant, 59 Barb., 574; Telegraph Co. v. Semines, supra; Badger v. Mayer, 8 Misc. Rep., 583 (28 N. Y., 765).
Other errors complained of are passed, for the reason that they are such as will not probably recur on another trial. For the reasons indicated, the judgment is reversed and remanded for a new trial under proceedings consistent herewith.
Petition for rehearing by appellee, overruled.