1 Lans. 55 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1869
Present — Balcom, Boardman and Parker, JJ.
By the Court
I have examined with care nearly all the cases cited by counsel. As a result of such examination, it is clear that if the contract between the plaintiff and defendants was entire, to attend the final settlement of the accounts of defendants before the surrogate,
The case of Adams v. Fort Plain Bank (36 N. Y., 255) is not in conflict. The items of plaintiff’s account, in that case, consisted of several isolated and independent charges for services in no way connected with each other.
Here, however, all the services rendered by the plaintiff were in and about a single transaction, the final settlement of the accounts of the defendants as administratrix and administrator, the retainer general and the employment continuous until the settlement. Indeed, on page 260, Davies, Oh. J., recognizes the rule laid down that the services must be brought to an end before the attorney can bring an action. It is in the power of an attorney, at any time, to demand pay for services rendered, and, if there be no contract in the way, he can refuse to proceed until such payment is made. Upon a refusal or neglect to pay after such demand he can sue for and collect the same. But so long as he is engaged in the
Are the defendants properly joined ? They insist their interests are not joint. But they were jointly interested in the settlement of their accounts, the employment was for their joint benefit. Plaintiff acted for them both, and both recognized and allowed such action on his part. However diverse or even hostile their interests might be on distribution, they necessarily harmonized in their trust capacity. Each had an equal interest in and control over the trust property, and their management and disposition of such trust estate was the subject for consideration before the surrogate. This brings the case within section 119 of the Code, “ united in interest.” It would be impossible to apportion such costs between these defendants. (1 Pars. on Cont., 5th ed., 14, 19.)
It is settled by the case of Willcox v. Smith (26 Barb., 316) that the defendants are personally liable to the plaintiff, and that they cannot be made liable in their representative character. (See also Bowman v. Tallman, 2 Robert, 385; 1 Wait Law and Pr., 84.)
The item of $601.55, adjusted by the surrogate in 1855, was not conclusive between attorney and client. It was simply an allowance of so much to the defendants upon their account in exoneration of their liabilities. When the decree making such allowance was reversed, even the slight vitality given by the surrogate’s allowance was gone, and the items thereafter remained as if they had never been allowed.
The referee allowed interest to the plaintiff upon his disbursements for defendants from the date of such disbursements respectively to the date of his report (June 12, 1868). In this I think the referee erred. He should have restricted that interest as in the case of services, and allowed interest thereon only from the 26th day of February, 1866. As the defendants’ obligation to repay these advancements is implied from the relations of the parties, interest by way of penalty,
The exceptions of defendants are sufficient to cover the error of the referee.
The amount of interest improperly allowed as afosesaid, upon disbursements, prior to February 26, 1866, is $281.33. A new trial, costs to abide the event, should be granted, unless the plaintiff shall stipulate to remit that amount from the judgment in this action at its date, in which case such judgment to be affirmed without costs to either party on this appeal.