83 N.Y.S. 680 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
"This is an application by James Sweeney, the beneficiary ini á certain policy of insurance, to compel B--, an attorney, tó deliver" to the petitioner the policy in which he is named as beneficiary. Thomas J. Sweeney, the petitioner’s brother, was the insured, and on the twenty-eighth day of August sustained injuries in a collision with a railroad train, from which he died the next day: The" coroner took possession of the policy of insurance, together with cértain other effects belonging to the deceased, and on the secoiid day of September delivered the policy to the appellant. A motion was granted at Special Term requiring the appellant to turn over the policy to the petitioner, and from that order" the attorney appeals. The attorney refuses to surrender the policy except on payment of certain fees and charges which he claims lie has earned and expended in connection with giving notice to the insurance company of the accident and death, and for proofs of loss which he procured and submitted to the company, upon which the claim was allowed. The petitioner makes the. point in this court that the attorney has no lien upon the policy, and that, consequently, he is withholding it wrongfully, and that the order must be sustained. Such, however, is not the rule. It is the welksettled law of this State, that, an attorney has a lien upon the securities of his client which are in liis hands, for services which he has rendered. (Matter H--,- am, Attorney, 87 N. Y. 521; Matter of Knapp, 85 id. 284; Maxwell v. Cottle, 72 Hun, 529 ; McKibbin v. Nofis, 76 id. 344.) The inquiry, therefore, becomes whether the appellant has rendered any services for the petitioner upon his retainer, and whether, the services are unpaid.
The affidavit of Mary E. G-racey, sister of the petitioner, was read
In his own affidavit opposing the motion, the appellant recites in detail the services he rendered in obtaining correct and proper proofs of loss, such as the insurance company had indicated to him were necessary for an allowance of the claim under the policy. The services and the disbursements connected therewith are in no way disputed, and appear from his affidavit to have been considerable. He deposes also that at the time of the death of the insured, one Decker, the coroner, took possession of the effects of the deceased pending the appointment of an . administrator; that among these effects was the policy in question, and on the 2d day of September, 1902, the petitioner and his sister, Mary E. Gracev, came to his office and that there, in the presence of himself, the petitioner, and
The affidavits establish the fact that the appellant was employed by James Sweeney and, in this view of the case, it matters not whether Sweeney or any one else, at the time of the employrnent, knew who the beneficiary was. It affirmatively appears that Sweeney did not revoke the appellant’s retainer when he was later advised that he himself was named as the beneficiary. We are not called upon to determine in this proceeding the amount of the attorney’s lien. It appears satisfactorily from the evidence that he has performed services for which he has not been paid, and he, therefore, has a lien upon the securities in his hands for the payment of his
The order must, therefore, be reversed, with costs, and motion •denied, with costs.
Goodrich, P. J., Bartlett, Woodward and Hirschberg, JJ., •concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and .motion denied, with costs.