179 A.D. 648 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1917
On February 5, 1916, one Leon Francis Pettit, chief of the volunteer fire department of Babylon, L. I., was killed while proceeding to a fire, the motor truck on which he was riding being struck by one of the trains of the Long Island Railroad Company. On the same' day that the accident occurred a friend of the petitioner visited the widow of said Pettit, and urged that petitioner be retained as attorney to prosecute the railroad company for damages. He was accordingly retained and obtained from the surrogate of Suffolk county, in which the deceased and his widow resided, the appointment of said widow as administratrix. Petitioner made an agreement with said administratrix which, as he states it, was that he should “ take up the prosecution of her case against the railroad company and to advance out of my own pocket for her benefit the necessary disbursements, and to accept as compensation for my services a reasonable amount wholly contingent upon a recovery and the amount thereof.”
Petitioner thereupon took steps to recover damages and after discontinuing one suit and bringing another, succeeded in recovering a judgment against the railroad company for $16,271.36, including costs and interest from the date of death. He had a difference with Mrs. Pettit as to the amount which he should receive as compensation, and on June 11, 1917, filed a petition in the Supreme Court in the county of New York and obtained an order to show cause, under
The present motion is made by the Suffolk County Trust Company, the guardian of the property of the three infant children of the decedent Pettit, and is for vacating and setting aside the above-mentioned orders made at Special Term in this county. The motion was denied, and the guardian appeals.
The orders made at Special Term undertaking to enforce the lien of the attorney were unauthorized. The cause of action for death is the creature of statute (Code Civ. Proc. § 1902 el seq.) and the Legislature has provided who shall have power to determine the fee to be paid to the attorney who recovers the judgment. The proceeds of such a judgment constitute no part of the estate of the decedent, but go directly to those specified
Section 1903 of the Code of Civil Procedure confides the duty of allowing the expenses of such an action, which includes the compensation of counsel, to the surrogate, meaning, of course, the surrogate who issued the letters testamentary or of administration. The discretion of the surrogate in allowing the reasonable expenses of such an action cannot be controlled by any agreement the executor or administrator makes with the attorney. (Matter of Meng, 96 Misc. Rep. 126.) As we consider, the exclusive power to fix an attorney’s fee in such a case, at least in the first instance, is vested in the surrogate. Whether the Appellate Division can review his discretion is not before us for consideration.
The very question now presented was in effect decided in Cunningham v. City of New York (141 N. Y. Supp. 1000; affd., 162 App. Div. 851). In that case it was held that the surrogate alone had the power to fix the fees of the attorney, the power of the Supreme Court being limited to requiring the deposit of a sufficient sum to cover any fee which might probably be fixed.
The amendment of section 1903 of the Code by chapter 641 of the Laws of 1915, does not in our opinion take away the exclusive authority of the surrogate to fix the fees. It rather emphasizes his discretionary power in the premises.
It was unnecessary to appeal from the first two orders. As the guardian was given no notice of them a motion to vacate them was its appropriate remedy. Those appeals will, therefore, be dismissed, without costs. The third order which denied the motions to vacate the two orders previously made is reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion granted, with ten dollars costs, to be paid by the petitioner personally. This will leave outstanding as the
Clarke, P. J., Dowling, Smith and Page, JJ., concurred.
Order of August 10, 1917, reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion granted, with ■ ten dollars costs to be paid by petitioner personally. Appeals from orders of June 14 and August 6, 1917, dismissed, without costs.