102 N.Y.S. 368 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1907
This action was brought to enforce an attorney’s lien. It appears that on or about the 21st of February, 1901, the defendant Bonaddio was a passenger upon one of the trains of the defendant railroad company, and received injuries thereon in the State of blew Jersey; that on or about the 26th of February, 1901, the plaintiff, an attorney and counselor at law duly admitted to practice in the courts of this State, was employed and retained by Bonaddio to bring suit against the defendant railroad company to recover for the injuries sustained by him, and at that time made an agreement by which he was to pay the plaintiff one-third of any .recovery had pr settlement made with the said Pennsylvania Bailroad Company by reason of the injuries so received, and the plaintiff was also to be entitled to any costs awarded in any proceeding brought to enforce such cause of action. Pursuant to this retainer and on or-about the 28th of February, 1901, an action was brought in the Supreme Court of this State by th 3 defendant Bonaddio against the Pennsylvania Bailroad Company, the plaintiff appearing as his attorney. On the 17th of June, 1901, the said railroad company settled the cause of action to enforce which the action in the Supreme Court of this State was brought for $1,500, which was
Upon the plaintiff commencing the' action.against, the Pennsylvania Railroad Company for the injuries which Bonaddio sustained while a passenger upon one of its trains, there accrued to the plaintiff a lien upon the cause of action sought to be enforced. Undér section 66 of the Code of Civil Procedure this lien attached upon 'the commencement of the action to any “ verdict, report, decision, judgment or final order in his client’s favor, and the proceeds thereof in whosoever
As the plaintiff had a lien upon the fund in the hands of the' defendant, in an action or proceeding to enforce such lien the client was a necessary party, as such client was entitled to the fund subject to the lien and had a right to be heard as to the existence of the lien and the attorney’s right to enforce it. (Oishei v. Pennsylvania R. R. Co., supra; Oishei v. Metropolitan St. R. Co., No. 1, supra.) This action was, therefore, properly brought against the railroad company, in whose hands the fund was at the time the lien attached, and against the client, who had a-right to be heard before a part of his money in the possession of the railroad company could be appropriated to the payment of the plaintiff’s lien. Since the settlement, however, the client has departed from this State and service of proc
The decisions relating to the jurisdiction obtained over property in the hands óf a foreign corporation by a service of attachment upon an agent of the corporation situated within the jurisdiction in
There is nothing in the case of Morehouse v. Brooklyn Heights R. R. Co. (185 N. Y. 520) which is at all inconsistent with this view. It is true the court approved in that" case of a judgment" which required the plaintiff to issue execution against the property of the client, as the defendant company only became liable to pay in case such execution issued against Nathan, was returned unsatisfied. But in this case it was expressly found that the client, although served with process, did not appear; that he was without the jurisdiction of the court, and was a day laborer,- financially irresponsible. The law never requires an unmeaning ceremony to be performed before a substantial right is enforced, and although a joint judgment iq awarded against both defendants, the provision that an execution, should be issued and returned unsatisfied against the client before
These questions were discussed in Oishei v. Pennsylvania R. R. Co. (supra) and Oishei v. Met. St. R. Co. No. 1 (supra), and although it is claimed by counsel for the defendant that such discussions in those cases were ohiter, the rule' there announced received the approval of the court, and we are satisfied that what was said is correct.
The other question presented upon this appeal is whether the court lost jurisdiction to determine this question in consequence of the removal’ of the action brought to enforce the cause of action upon which the plaintiff had a lien to the United States Circuit Court before the settlement. It is quite clear, however, that such removal did not affect the plaintiff’s lien upon the cause of action sought to be enforced as the lien existed by operation of law. The right to the lien did not depend in any way upon the decision or judgment of the United States Circuit Court; .the lien attached upon the commencement of the action in the Supreme Court of the. State of liew York and upon the settlement attached to the fund in the hands of the defendant, which determined the cause of action, and the relation between the plaintiff and defendant was not different from that in any case in which the defendant had in its hands a fund to which a lien had attached. The plaintiff, therefore, had' the right to apply to the Supreme Court of the' State of Hew York, a court of competent jurisdiction, to enforce that lien if it could get jurisdiction over the defendant railroad company, who had in its hands the fund to which the lien attached.
It follows, therefore, that upon the facts found, "which are supported by the evidence, the judgment in favor of the plaintiff was right, and should be affirmed, with costs.
Patterson, P. J., McLaughlin, Houghton and Lambert, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs. Order filed.
Sic.