Appellant brings forward several assignments of error and makes three basic arguments in support of his position that the trial court should be reversed. First, he contends the trial court erred by denying his application for attorney’s fees and expenses. By his second argument, he asserts the trial court erred by striking his notice of claim of an attorney’s charging lien. Third, he contends the trial court erred in denying his motion to intervene as of right. In an assignment of error relating to a procedural matter, he assigns error to the trial court’s decision to include in the record on appeal the answers to certain requests for admissions filed after notice of appeal was given. We conclude the appeal is interlocutory and dismiss the appeal without addressing the assignments of error.
“An interlocutory order is one made during the pendency of an action, which does not dispose of the case, but leaves it for further action by the trial court ... to settle and determine the entire controversy.”
Veazey v. Durham,
In this case, the orders from which appellant seeks to appeal are interlocutory and do not affect a substantial right of appellant. The denial of attorney’s fees under G.S. 50-16.4 was not a final order of the trial court. At the time appellant’s motion was filed, there had been no determination that his client, defendant, was entitled to alimony pendente lite under G.S. 50-16.3. Thus, appellant was not yet entitled to attorney’s fees under G.S. 50-16.4. The court did not refuse to make a determination whether or not appellant was entitled to attorney’s fees but merely stated his claim was “premature.” Appellant may appeal the denial of his motion after final judgment or may bring a separate lawsuit to collect fees. Thus, no substantial right of appellant is affected by our failure to entertain the interlocutory appeal on this issue.
The charging lien is an equitable lien which gives an. attorney the right to recover his fees “from a fund recovered by his aid.” 7 Am. Jur. 2d, Attorneys at Law, Sec. 281. The charging lien attaches not to the cause of action, but to the judgment at the time it is rendered. Id. Sec 296. At the time when this purported charging lien would have attached, the time of judgment in favor of defendant[ ]. . . , the judgment was not a fund recovered by [appellant’s] aid, as he had been discharged. [Appellant] was entitled to no interest in the fund.
Covington v. Rhodes,
The denial of appellant’s motion to intervene is also an interlocutory order. Although appellant has moved to intervene as of right, he is not entitled to do so. He has no statutory right of intervention. G.S. 1A-1, Rule 24(a)(1). Further, he is not entitled to intervene as of right under G.S. 1A-1, Rule 24(a)(2).
Ellis v. Ellis,
Appeal dismissed.
