16 Wend. 446 | Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors | 1836
The following opinion was delivered :
The only question in this case is, whether the attorney had a lien upon the judgment which took preference of the right of set-off on the part of the defendants in the ejectment suit. The chancellor allowed the claim of the attorney, and denied the set-off. On a motion to the supreme court, the set-off would have been ordered without regard to the attorney’s claim. Such has been the practice from 1811, when Porter v. Lane was decided, 8 Johns. R. 357, until 1835. The People ex rel. Manning v. The New-York Com. Pleas, 13 Wendell, 649. Such also was the practice of the court of chancery as declared by Chancellor Kent, in The Mohawk Bank v. Burrows, 6 Johns. Ch. R. 317, A. D. 1822. It continued till 1829, when, in Dunkin v. Vandenbergh, 1 Paige, 622, the present chancellor reconsidered the point, and held that the attorney’s lien should be preferred.
In England the practice is different in different courts, In the King’s bench the lien was allowed; in the common pleas it was denied ; in the court of chancery it appears to have been quite doubtful whether, on motion, the court would set-off one judgment against another in different causes even in that court, though they were in the constant habit of setting off interlocutory costs in the same cause. Wright v. Miller, 1 Simon & Stu. 266. But so far as
But the practice of courts is one thing. While each is left to prescribe rules for the orderly conduct of its own business, a different question arises when they are called upon to apply the statute of set-off. It lies at the foundation of the attorney’s lien even in the King’s bench where it is protected to the greatest extent, that the court have a discretion to grant or refuse the set-off on motion, Mitchell v. Oldfield, 4 T. R. 123 ; but when we come to a bill filed ór a trial at law, there is no discretion. On motion
I am, therefore, of opinion that the decree should be reversed ; and that the proceedings be remitted with directions to allow the set-off.
On the question being put, Shall this decree be reversed 1 the members of the court voted as follows :
In the affirmative—The President of the Senate, the Chief Justice, Justices Bronson and Cowen, and Senators Beck-with, Fox, Huntington, J. P. Jones, Lacey, Lawyer, Loomis, Seger, Speaker, and Willes—14.
In the negative—Senators Armstrong, J. Beardsley, L. Beardsley, Downing, Edwards, Ganesvoort, Maison, and Sterling—8.
Whereupon the decree of the chancellor was reversed.