38 P. 247 | Idaho | 1894
Defendant, having certain claims against .the United States government for Indian depredations, on the twentieth day of January, 1891, made a contract in writing with plaintiffs to prosecute said claims before the court of claims or elsewhere, as might be required for the best interests of claimant; and said defendant, by the terms of said contract, agreed to pay to the plaintiffs, as compensation for their services in and about the collection of said claims, thirty-three and one-third per cent of any and all sums collected by plaintiffs upon said claims, and also any sum disbursed by plaintiffs for any reasonable and necessary expenses which might 'be'incurred by said plaintiffs in the prosecution of said claims. On March 3, 1891, the federal Congress passed an act, entitled “An act to provide for the adjudication of claims arising from Indian depredations,” in which act it is provided, inter alia, “that all sales, transfers or assignments of any such claims heretofore or hereafter made, except such as have occurred in the due administration of decedents’ estates, and all contracts heretofore made for fees and allowances to claim- . ant’s attorney are hereby declared void. And all warrants 'issued by the Secretary of the Treasury, in payment of such "judgments, shall be made payable and delivered only to the
In September, 1892, judgment was recovered in the court of claims in favor of the defendant upon one of his said claims against the government- of the United States for the sum of $4,675; and, upon the entry of said judgment, there was allowed and paid to the plaintiffs, as attorneys for claimant, by said court, the sum of - $350. It is contended by plaintiffs that the allowance by the court is in the nature of taxed costs at common law, and have nothing to do with the compensation fixed or agreed upon by contract between the attorney and his client. “Taxed costs,” as known to the common law or as generally provided for by statutes or rules of court, are uniform and specifically defined, and there is nothing in the language of Chief Justice Richardson in Redfield v. United States, 27 Ct. of Cl. 473 (cited by counsel for appellants), as we read it, which militates against this position. Speaking of the compensation provided for by the act of March 3, 1891, the chief justice of the court of claims says: “This we regard as like the taxable costs in actions at common law, which the parties themselves cannot fix by contract.” There is this distinction, however, between the compensation provided for by the act of Congress and taxable costs. The latter are' given in excess of or in addition to the judgment recovered, and are paid to and not by the prevailing party; while the compensation provided by the act of Congress is fixed by the court, and deducted from or paid out