30 A.D. 602 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
The petitioner, James A. Deering, presented a petition to this court entitled “ In the Matter of the Board of Street Opening and Improvement of the City of New York, for and on behalf of the Mayor, Aldermen and Commonalty of the Said City, Relative to the Opening of Lexington Avenue, between 97th and 102nd Streets, in the City of New York.” In that petition it is alleged that these proceedings were commenced to acquire title to.the lands required for the opening of Lexington avenue, and that commissioners were appointed; that one John Schreyer, who was the owner of property taken for such street opening, employed the petitioner to take such proceedings as might seem advisable towards obtaining compensation for the loss and damage sustained by him for lands taken, and agreed to pay the said petitioner “ a sum equal to 50% of whatever sum should be allowed or confirmed on account of the said loss and damage,” and that an award was made for the land so' taken that had been owned by the said Schreyer, of the sum of $22,500, which award was confirmed; that the sum of $22,500 remained in the hands of the comptroller of the city of New York; that the petitioner had filed with the comptroller notice of lien as attorney at law of the said Schreyer for the amount due to said petitioner; that the said Schreyer refused to pi ay the amount due as claimed by said petitioner, and that the mayor, aldermen and commonalty of the city of New York had certain liens for unpaid taxes and assessments. The petitioner prayed that an order be made referring it to a referee, to determine the claim of said petitioner for services rendered to the said Schreyer, and that the said sum of $11,250 be determined and adjudicated and the same be declared to be a lien upon the said award, and that said petitioner be adjudged to be entitled to be p>aid that sum out of the said award by the comptroller of the city of New York. To this petition Schreyer filed an answer, in the 2d clause of which he takes the following objection : “ That the award made in the above-entitled proceeding was in a spiecial proceeding, and not in an action, and he denies the jurisdiction of this court in this proceeding to adjudge that he, said John Schreyer, shall p>ay to said James A. Deering any sum whatever, or to adjudge that the said Deering has any lien up>on said award.” Upon the presentation of this petition and answer, the court made
We think this objection taken by the counsel for Schreyer in the answer should have been sustained, and that the court had no power to direct that this amount due from the city of New York, and which stood in place of the real estate of the appellant which had been condemned and taken by the city in these proceedings, should be paid to the petitioner. It appeared from the petition that the report of the commissioners allowed to Schreyer as the owner of the property taken under these proceedings the sum of $22,500, and that said report was on June 1, 1894, duly confirmed. This special proceeding, having for its object the condemnation of this property to be acquired for the opening of Lexington avenue, was terminated by the entry of the final order, and all lands and property embraced within the limits of the avenue opened became vested in the city, and this award stood in place thereof, the city being bound to pay that award to Schreyer within four calendar months after the confirmation of the commissioners’ report. In case of their failure to make such payment, Schreyer was entitled to maintain an action
If the attorney’s agreement with Schreyer gave him a lien upon the city’s obligation, or constituted him an equitable assignee thereof, to the extent of fifty per cent, he could have maintained a proper action in equity against the city and Schreyer to liquidate his demand and to secure the payment to him of his share of the sum due by the city. The court, however, had no jurisdiction in a summary way to determine the amount of the indebtedness of Schreyer to the petitioner, and to award the petitioner judgment against
The cases cited by the respondent, where the court has proceeded in a summary way to determine the compensation due to an attorney for services rendered to a client where the client has moved for a substitution of attorneys, or where an application has been made to the court to compel an attorney to deliver up to a client the papers in the attorney’s possession, or where there is a fund in court which a client has moved shall be paid to him and which is subject to the lien of the attorney, do not apply, for in these cases the client asked the court for an order against the attorney, and the court there has power to determine, in a summary way, the conditions upon which such relief shall be granted. There the client, himself, submits to the jurisdiction of the court; and as part of the relief demanded, the amount of the attorney’s lien is to be determined. We know of no case in which the court has entertained such a proceeding summarily to require a client to pay to an attorney the amount that the attorney claims is due to him from his client for services rendered.
We think, therefore, that the order appealed from should be reversed and the proceedings dismissed, with costs.
Babrett, Rumsey and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed and proceedings dismissed, with costs.