84 N.Y.S. 634 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
Lead Opinion
The plaintiffs are attorneys and counselors at law, engaged as copartners in the practice of their profession in the city of Syracuse, N. Y. In the complaint and moving affidavits it is alleged that the defendant is indebted to the plaintiffs in the sum of $1,779.55, being the balance claimed to be due and owing to them on account of legal services rendered to and moneys paid out for the defendant in certain actions and legal proceedings conducted by them during a period of five years commencing in the year 1897. It is stated, in substance, that such indebtedness was incurred: First. In and about the probate of the last will and testament of one Harriet White, deceased, in which the defendant was named as legatee; in resisting the issuing of letters testamentary to the person named as executor in said will; in procuring the defendant to be appointed administratrix of the estate—all in the Surrogate’s Court of Onondaga county; and in giving counsel and advice to the defendant prior to the probate of the will, and afterwards to her as administratrix in matters relating to the general management of the estate. Second. In and about an action in the Supreme Court in which the defendant was sole plaintiff, brought to recover certain shares of bank stock bequeathed .to the defendant by the will of Harriet White, deceased, and which b,ad been procured to be assigned by her to another by means of fraud. ' Third. In and about an action in the Supreme Court,
This complicated condition of affairs is sought to be obviated and simplified to some extent by the admissions or stipulations contained in the opposing affidavits. In the affidavit made by Clinton Snook, the husband of the defendant, it is stated that the defendant will admit upon the trial of the action that the plaintiffs rendered the services alleged in the complaint to have been performed by them, but there is still an issue as to the value of such services, and for whom rendered. The amount of the various items of disbursements is admitted to be correct, but it is still insisted that such disbursements are not chargeable to the defendant. It is therefore apparent that the admissions contained in the answer would aid very little in determining the rights of the parties. The value of every one of the forty items for services must be proven, and it must be ascertained which, if any of them, are chargeable to the defendant individually, or to her in some other capacity, or at all. So, with reference to the items of disbursements, while the amount is not in dispute, it must be decided to which one of the four accounts each item belongs. If the contention of the plaintiffs is correct, their claim did not result because of a single retainer to conduct a single action, but on account of several distinct employments for the institution and prosecution of independent proceedings. Considering all the allegations of the parties, we are constrained to hold that a proper case was presented to the Special Term for a compulsory reference, within the meaning of section 10x3 of the Code of Civil Procedure. We are not unmindful of the rule that “the court refers suits for attorney’s fees with great reluctance, and only when it will be impracticable to try it with a jury.” Watson v. Cooley (Super. Ct.) 3 N. Y. Supp. 211. The rule adverted to is, for obvious reasons, a salutary one, but it should not be interpreted so as to put attorneys entirely outside the pale of section 1013 of the Code. The correct rule is stated in Ruger v. Belden, 27 Hun, 405, affirmed 91 N. Y. 646, as follows:
“Action for attorney’s services. The services were rendered in several different actions or proceedings running through a period of six years. According to the affidavits on the part of the plaintiffs and the pleadings, the services were rendered under several separate retainers, and the special term is deemed to have so held. The value of the services is put in issue by the pleadings, and the trial will involve the examination of a large number of items of service, with a view to determining the value of each. We think the action is referable.”
In Richards v. Stokes, 1 App. Div. 306, 37 N. Y. Supp. 247, the court said:
“In view of the position of the plaintiffs, as counsel for the defendant in looking after his individual interest, and their retainer by the executors of the will of James Stokes, deceased, accepted with the knowledge and consent of the defendant, it would be impossible for any jury to separate the services which were rendered for the estate and those which were rendered for the defendant individually.”
The language of the learned justice is applicable to the facts of the case at bar, and in fact that case in all its important features, except as to the amount involved, is almost exactly like the one before us.
Order affirmed, with $10 costs and disbursements.
HISCOCK and STOVER, JJ., concur.
Dissenting Opinion
The amount of disbursements contained in the itemized bill of the plaintiffs is conceded, and that the services set forth were actually performed as claimed by the respondents. A stipulation covering these items or facts could be made as a condition of refusing to refer the case. Eliminate these questions, and we have a controversy as to whether the services were actually rendered for the appellant. That certainly is a question of fact which a jury should pass upon, and particularly so as the parties pressing the claim are lawyers. That leaves as substantially the only question the value of the services rendered by the plaintiffs. It is quite obvious reading between the lines that the value of these services is the only question which will be litigated upon this trial. I am unable to find a case where a reference has been ordered when the issue, however extended it may be, or however numerous the items, simply involved the value of the services which go to make up the account. In any action where an attorney sues for services extending over a series of years involving trials and appeals, he may make up an extended itemized account. In one case where a reference was denied these items aggregated 150 in number (Feeter v. Arkenburgh, 147 N. Y. 237, 41 N. E. 518); in another 125 items (Spence v. Simis, 137 N. Y. 616, 33 N. E. 554). The courts, I find, are very chary, and properly so, about granting compulsory orders of reference in actions brought by attorneys. Cantine, as Ex’rx, v. Russell, 168 N. Y. 484, 61 N. E. 769; Hedges v. The Methodist Protestant Church, 23 App. Div. 347, 48 N. Y. Supp. 154; Randall v. Sherman, 131 N. Y. 669, 30 N. E. 589. Attorneys representing plaintiffs are very reluctant to have questions of fact in common-law actions taken from the jury, and they, of all litigants, ought to be willing to adhere rigidly to the rule that the jury is the tribunal for their determination.
Assuming there are questions of a “complicated nature” involved, that furnishes no reason why an order of reference should be directed
I think the order should be reversed.
WILLIAMS, J., concurs.