36 Mo. 150 | Mo. | 1865
delivered the opinion of the court.
Plaintiff brought suit against the defendant, in the Circuit Court of Macon county, on subscription to stock. Several other suits precisely similar were brought at the same time, in the same court, against different defendants, and among them one by the name of Winkler. The same defence was made in each case. The attonieys for the respective' parties entered into a written agreement, stating that, as the same facts and the same questions arose in all the causes mentioned, they would therefore abide the final judgment that should be rendered in the case of the plaintiff against Winkler; and that a like judgment should be rendered in each of the several cases. Upon a trial of the cause in the Circuit Court, judgment was given in favor of Winkler; from which the plaintiff appealed to the Supreme Court, in which court the judgment was affirmed.
The position assumed by the appellant’s counsel is, that, the Legislature having repealed the penalty contained in the act of 1855, a valid and subsisting obligation exists against the respondent, and that the attorneys had no authority to enter into the agreement, and that it is therefore void. The whole question is involved in the binding force and validity of the agreement. How far an attorney-at-law may bind his clients by his arrangements, in a case without special instructions or authority, is not definitely settled. There is no doubt that many entries which he might make on the docket — agreements about continuances, admissions about evidence, or the general conduct of the trial — would bind his client. It is said, in many cases, that he has a right to submit a cause to arbitration; but this doctrine has been restricted, in others, to suits actually pending in courts; whilst it is generally denied that he has a right to enter into a compromise without authority from his client, either express or implied. The arrangement in this case is not a compromise according to the usual acceptation of that term, for that generally applies to releasing a part of the debt, taking land instead of money, or changing the nature and character of the thing to be recovered; it comes nearer within the general management of the case.
In the Bank of Georgetown v. Geary (5 Pet. 99), suit had been instituted upon a promissory note against the drawer and endorser, and the attorney for the bank requested the
There are many marks of similarity between the two cases. In the absence of any adjudication of the question involved in this case, the rights of the appellant were at least doubtful. Should the suits be regularly litigated step by step, and ultimately determined adversely, the costs accruing in the several courts would, of course, have been a
the judgment is affirmed.