145 N.Y.S. 258 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1913
Lead Opinion
By moving for judgment on the pleadings defendants, for the purpose of the motion, admit the truth of the facts alleged in plaintiffs’ amended complaint. (Felt v. Germania Life Ins. Co., 149 App. Div. 14.) The broad question here presented then necessarily resolves itself into the inquiry: Does this complaint state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against these defendants?
Inspection of the complaint discloses that plaintiffs, who are a copartnership of attorneys, engaged as' such in the practice of their profession, claim an equitable lien for disbursements incurred and professional services rendered by them as attorneys and counsel for the defendants Schuster in various and important legal proceedings involving or affecting these defendants’ title to and possession of a tract of about fifty acres of land situate in the town of Hamburg, Erie county, N. Y.; and in this action they seek to have the amount of such lien ascertained, and, as ascertained, impressed upon said real property.
The title to these premises, which defendants had at the time plaintiffs’ services as their attorneys began, originated in a certificate of sale thereof made by the State Engineer and Surveyor pursuant to a resolution of the Commissioners of the Land Office and in 1888 issued to one Barbara Schuster whose rights therein and whose possession of the premises thereunder defendants had thereafter duly acquired. The certificate recited the payment by Barbara Schuster of the sum of $500 and that $508 remained due, for the payment of which she then
It clearly appears from this recital of the actions and proceedings in which plaintiffs rendered their professional services, for which they now claim an attorneys’ lien upon the premises above referred to, that neither in the foreclosure action, the summary proceedings nor the ejectment action were the title and possession of defendants therein in any sense the product or result or proceeds of the attorneys’ services, or of any cause of action, claim or counterclaim of defendants involved therein or determined thereby. In the foreclosure action the defense established was that as to these defendants their title to the premises was superior to that of the claim which was sought to be enforced in that action. In like manner the result of the summary proceedings and the ejectment action showed that in each instance the defense established was against claims equally unfounded and unenforcible. In Matter of
Neither do the plaintiffs show themselves entitled to a lien on these premises under the law as it existed unaffected by the statute. The scope and extent of an attorney’s lien before they were enlarged by the statute are discussed and clearly defined by Earl, J., in Goodrich v. McDonald (112 N. Y.
It is suggested that the case of West v. Bacon (13 App. Div. 371) is an authority in support of plaintiffs’ claim to a lien upon the premises at least so far as the value of their services in the summary proceedings and the ejectment action is concerned. The attorney’s claim of a lien upon the property in question in that action was sustained in the Appellate Division, but was denied on appeal to the Court of Appeals (164 N. Y. 425) upon the ground that it appeared that the attorney had waived the lien, if he ever had one, as to which the court declined to express an opinion. If, however, the case is to be considered an authority for the principle that, except for the waiver, the attorney’s lien would have been available, it does not seem to be applicable to the present case. Though the attorney claiming the lien appeared for a defendant in the action, in which the title to the property was adjudicated in his favor, yet before that action the client had apparently parted with his title. The affirmative relief granted by the judgment restored to him the control of it, and, therefore, might perhaps be considered, within the meaning of the statute, as proceeds of a judgment in the Ghent’s favor upon his cause of action or claim. That case is, therefore, in principle not an authority adverse to the conclusions hereinbefore expressed.
Plaintiffs have no lien upon the premises for the value of
There still remains to be considered plaintiffs’ claim of a lien for services in procuring the legislation authorizing, and the land patent issued pursuant thereto, above recited, in connection with perfecting defendants’ title to the premises and releasing them from payment to the State of the balance of the purchase price unpaid. It is doubtless true that independently of any statutory provision plaintiffs would be entitled to an attorney’s retaining lien for the value of such services, provided there was anything belonging to the defendants which had come to plaintiffs’ possession or control in their professional capacity. (Matter of Knapp, 85 N. Y. 284; Ward v. Craig, 87 id. 550.) But here there is nothing. Neither is there any “verdict, report, decision, judgment or final order in [the] client’s favor” or “proceeds thereof” bringing the claim within the equitable control of the court under the statute. It is only as the statute provides “From the commencement of an action or special proceeding, or the service of an answer containing a counterclaim,” that the statutory lien of an attorney attaches. These services did not and in the nature of things Could not involve the expressed prerequisite to such a lien of either the commencement of an action or special proceeding or the service of an answer containing a counterclaim. It is true that these services in completing and perfecting defendants’ title to the premises were performed while the ejectment action was still in its final issue undetermined. But these services were to an end distinct and separate from the
The order should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and defendants’ motion granted, with ten dollars costs.
All concurred, except Kruse, P. J., and Merrell, J., who dissented in an opinion by Merrell, J.
Dissenting Opinion
The only question presented upon this appeal is as to whether plaintiffs can assert and have impressed upon the specific real property involved in the long legal controversy a lien for such balance as may be ascertained to he their due for professional services rendered therein. It is not for us to determine upon this appeal as to whether the amount claimed by the plaintiffs is excessive, but merely as to whether the plaintiffs have a right to maintain this action, rather than to proceed against defendants in an action at law.
Unless plaintiffs can maintain this action they are in danger of being deprived of the fruits of their labor by a conveyance of the property sought to he impressed with their lien. The question, therefore, is: Have the plaintiffs an equitable lien on this real property which through their efforts has been reserved to defendants ? It is not primarily the statutory lien under section 475 of the Judiciary Law (Consol. Laws, chap. 30; Laws of 1909, chap. 35) which plaintiffs claim. It is a lien which they assert under broad principles of equity. It is not dependent upon litigation pending, for that is successfully terminated and its fruits absolutely in the hands of the clients. There can be no question but that under the statute plaintiffs would have an attorney’s charging lien upon the proceeds of the litigation if in money or other tangible personal form in whosesoever hands it might he found. (Matter of Knapp, 85 N. Y. 284.)
Such lien could he enforced by an action in a court of equity. (Matter of King, 168 N. Y. 53; Fischer-Hansen v. Brooklyn Heights R. R. Co., 173 id. 492.)
In the Fischer-Hansen case Judge Vann says: “ The statute [Code Civ. Proc. § 66; now Judiciary Law, § 475] is
In that case, as here, an attorney was endeavoring to impress a lien for professional services upon real property which had been the subject of the litigation and which his services had served to preserve to his client. The court held that the attorney was entitled to enforce his lien against the land, as the proceeds of the suit.
It is true that the judgment in that case was modified on appeal by the Court of Appeals. (164 N. Y. 425.) But the Court of Appeals did not pass upon the question as to whether the lien of an attorney might be asserted against the land, but held that plaintiff’s lien for services had been lost by a written waiver, theretofore executed by him. The decision of the appellate court was thus left unquestioned as to the right of the attorney to impress his lien upon the real property if it had not been expressly waived.
The case of West v. Bacon has been cited with approval in more recent decisions. (Skinner v. Busse, 38 Misc. Rep. 266; Cohn v. Polstein, 41 id. 434; Matter of Jones, 76 id. 332.)
In the case last cited Mr. Justice Blaokmar says: “ If, however, the client’s claim or cause of action is merged in a judgment there is nothing for the hen to attach to except the judgment or its proceeds. In the case of Sandiford v. Town of Hempstead [at bar] if the judgment established the plaintiff’s right to any land or protected him in its enjoyment, as it undoubtedly did, the attorney who conducted the litigation for him would have been entitled to a lien on the land as the proceeds of the judgment establishing plaintiff’s claim to it as against the defendant.”
I think the order at Special Term denying defendants’ motion for judgment upon the pleadings should be affirmed, with costs to the respondents.
Kruse, P. J., concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and defendants’ motion granted, with ten dollars costs.