10 N.J. Misc. 113 | Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas | 1932
This is a motion to substitute attorney for the plaintiffs and to compel present plaintiff’s attorney to deliver up evidence in the cause, such evidence being, among other things, a contract held by him for the purposes of the cause and originally drawn by him before the cause arose.
The present attorney resists such applications on the ground that his fees have not been paid, either for the original drawing of the contract in question or for his services in the preparation of the above cause for trial, including the filing of the complaint.
To this the client replies, through the attorney who is proposed to be substituted, that his present attorney has nothing due him now for services, at least in the present cause, since the same was taken on contingency, and that, in any event,
The ease will shortly be reached for trial, so that the question of fact as to the present right of the present attorney to compensation, and its amount, cannot be previously determined. The court must adjust the rights of the client, who is entitled to be represented by attorneys of his own choosing, and of the attorney who is by law entitled to certain liens to secure payment for services rendered, unless the right to such payment is lost.
The decisions of the courts are not always in harmony in this regard, due largely to a failure to distinguish between the two different liens to which an attorney is entitled. He is, first, entitled at common law to a general lien for the general balance due him, both for professional services in the past and in the pending proceedings, this lien covering any papers coming to his hands professionally. Delaney v. Husband (Court of Errors and Appeals), 64 N. J. L. 275.
He is further entitled at common law to a so-called charging lien attaching to the judgment, decree, or recovery obtained through the services of the attorney. This common law lien has now beeen embodied in our statute. Pamph. L. 1914, ch. 201, p. 410.
The present attorney has not waived or lost any rights by refusal to proceed until reimbursed for necessary disbursements in preparation for trial or if not on contingency, till reasonable payments are made on account of services rendered, such constituting a good cause for his refusal to proceed (2 B. G. L. Attorneys, § 30), this rule being well recognized in Massachusetts, Hew York, and Michigan, for instance.
Since the present attorney’s right to compensation cannot be determined before trial, his rights, if any, must be preserved during the trial, though the trial itself should proceed with the attorney desired by the client.