114 N.E. 46 | NY | 1916
This is an action by the assignee of a firm of attorneys and counselors at law to recover damages for the breach of a contract of professional employment. The plaintiff's assignors were retained by the appellants' testator to recover an award in condemnation proceedings. The contract stipulated that the compensation to be paid should be contingent upon success and fixed the sum that was to be paid in event of success as a proportion of the amount recovered. The plaintiff's assignors rendered substantial services under their contract and were discharged by the appellant without cause. The first question which we are called upon to determine is whether an attorney employed for a single litigation, who is dismissed by his client without cause, may maintain an action for damages for the breach of that contract or whether he is limited to a recovery based upon a quantum meruit. The learned Appellate Division were not in agreement upon this question although the majority were of the opinion that an action for damages might be maintained under such circumstances. While the precise question has not been determined by this court, the nature and character of the contract of employment of an attorney by a client have been clearly defined. It is evident that the question now presented for decision must be determined in accord with the legal principles which define the nature and character of such a contract. The contract under which an attorney is employed by a client has peculiar and distinctive features which differentiate it from ordinary contracts of employment. In ascertaining the nature of such a contract little assistance is to be derived from the consideration of analogous contracts under the English common law. *173
In the early case of Adams v. Stevens (26 Wend. 451, 455) the whole subject was learnedly discussed by Chancellor WALWORTH. After commenting upon the practice existing under the civil and common law the chancellor said: "Whatever may be the practice of other countries, however, the principle never has been adopted in this state that the professions of physicians and counsellors are merely honorary, and that they are not of right entitled to demand and receive a fair compensation for their services; especially where there is an agreement to pay them a fixed compensation, or such a reasonable remuneration for their services as those services shall be deemed to be worth." Substantially the view which Chancellor WALWORTH expressed is now embodied in statute form in section
Notwithstanding the fact that the employment of an attorney by a client is governed by the contract which the parties make, the peculiar relation of trust and confidence that such a relationship implies injects into the contract certain special and unique features. In Marsh v. Holbrook (3 Abb. Ct. App. Dec. 176) the question whether an attorney could recover upon aquantum meruit merely or might recover in an action for damages for breach of contract was discussed. Two members of the court who participated in the decision of that case were of the opinion that the attorney was entitled to recover the whole contract price. The question was not, however, determined, Judge WOODRUFF pointing out that the question was not necessarily before the court as the attorney had not appealed from the judgment. Since the decision of that case the nature of the contract existing between attorney and client has been the subject of frequent discussion. (Matter of Dunn,
That the client may at any time for any reason or without any reason discharge his attorney is a firmly-established rule which springs from the personal and confidential nature of the relation which such a contract of employment calls into existence. (Matter of Dunn,
We are aware that in certain jurisdictions a contrary rule has been adopted and that it has been held that where the attorney is employed to perform services for an agreed sum and is discharged without cause and thereby *175
prevented from the performance of the contract, the attorney may recover the full contract price. (Scheinesohn v. Lemonek,
In Scheinesohn v. Lemonek (supra) it was held that because the attorney had performed no services under his contract and the client had not been in any way benefited, the rule ofquantum meruit was inapplicable.
In French v. Cunningham (supra) the court held (p. 638) that the ordinary rule that the attorney could recover the reasonable value of his services does not apply "if the party doing the work has been prevented from completing it by the other party in violation of the contract."
In Myers v. Crockett (supra) the court said that "where the attorney had entered upon and was proceeding to perform the services contracted for, and the conduct of the case was thus wrested from him by his client, without any fault on his part, there would seem to be much reason in holding, that he was entitled to recover the full amount of the fee contracted to be paid for the services contemplated by the contract."
These decisions in other jurisdictions are not consistent with the principles which define the nature of the contract under which an attorney is employed, as those principles have been declared by the decisions of this court. Our own decisions clearly established the right of the client to terminate the contract with or without cause, and it follows from this rule, by necessary implication, that if the client has the right to terminate the contract, he cannot be made liable in damages for doing that which under the contract he has a right to do.
In Tenney v. Berger (
In Johnson v. Ravitch (
It is claimed by the appellant that as the plaintiff's assignors were discharged under the contract March 30th, *177 1900, and the present action was not commenced until October 15th, 1908, this action is barred by the Statute of Limitations.
The contract of an attorney with his client being an entire and continuous contract, the Statute of Limitations does not begin to run against a claim for services under such contract until the final service has been performed. (Eliot v. Lawton, 7 Allen, 274; Powers v. Manning,
It follows that the judgment must be reversed, with costs in all courts, and the complaint dismissed.
WILLARD BARTLETT, Ch. J., HISCOCK, COLLIN, CUDDEBACK, HOGAN and POUND, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed, etc.
(Opinion prepared by SEABURY, J., before his resignation and adopted by the court.)