Randall v. . Van Wagenen

115 N.Y. 527 | NY | 1889

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *530 The suit of O'Neil and others against the defendant Van Wagenen was settled and discontinued in 1877 by agreement between the parties without the consent of the attorney for the plaintiffs. The attorney subsequently brought this action against the parties to the former action, alleging the existence of a cause of action on contract in favor of the plaintiffs in the former action against the defendant therein for $10,799.35; the bringing of an action thereon by him as attorney for the plaintiffs; an agreement between the *531 plaintiffs in that action and their attorney to give him one-half interest in the claim and in any recovery as compensation for his services, and an ownership therein to that amount for such compensation, and a further agreement that the attorney should hold the entire claim as collateral security for his compensation, and for other indebtedness owing by the plaintiffs to the attorney, and that the plaintiffs made a parol assignment to the attorney of the entire claim for these purposes. The complaint further alleges that the defendant Van Wagenen had notice, in 1875, of the said agreement, and that the parties to the action fraudulently and collusively, and without the knowledge or consent of the attorney, settled and discontinued the action to cheat and defraud the attorney of his interest and rights under the agreement. It is alleged that the claim was good and collectible, and that the attorney, by reason of such fraud, has lost the one-half interest in the claim, and also the sum of $2,350 owing by the O'Neils to him for professional services in other matters and proceedings, and the plaintiff demands judgment against the defendants for $10,000.

The complaint was dismissed, and we think properly. So far as the claim of the plaintiff is founded upon the lien which the law gives attorneys for their services, there is no foundation for the action. By the common law an attorney, by commencing a suit, acquires no lien on the cause of action. The lien only arises after judgment, and is a right to have the judgment held for the debt, together with any security for the judgment, such as bail, until the lien is discharged, and to the extent of the lien payment by the defendant in the judgment to the plaintiff after notice, to the prejudice of the attorney, will be no discharge. (Pulver v. Harris, 52 N.Y. 73; Platt v. Jerome, 19 How. [U.S.] 384; Martin v. Hawks, 15 Johns. 405; People ex rel.Manning v. N.Y.C.P., 13 Wend. 652.) From the principle that there is no lien until judgment, it follows that it is competent for the parties acting bona fide to settle and discontinue a suit before judgment, without the consent of the attorney, and he is remitted *532 to his remedy against his client for his compensation. (Pulver v. Harris, supra, and cases cited.) But where such settlement is made collusively for the purpose of defrauding the attorney out of his costs, courts have been accustomed to intervene and to protect the attorney by permitting him to proceed with the suit, and if he is able to establish a right to recover on the cause of action as it originally stood, to permit such recovery, to the extent of his costs, in the action. (Coughlin v. N.Y.C. H.R.R.R. Co., 71 N.Y. 443, and cases cited.) And the court will set aside an order of discontinuance if it stands in the way. This is an adequate remedy, and, we think, the exclusive remedy, where the suit has been fraudulently settled by the parties before judgment, to cheat the attorney out of his costs. We have found no case of an equitable action to enforce the inchoate right of an attorney under such circumstances, and no such precedent ought, we think, to be established. (Goodrich v.McDonald, 112 N.Y. 164; Talcott v. Bronson, 4 Paige, 502; Tullis v. Bushnell, 65 How. 465.) This disposes of the action so far as it seeks to enforce, by means of an independent and original suit, the equitable right of the plaintiff, sought to be defeated by the alleged fraudulent and collusive settlement.

The only other aspect of the action which gives it any color of foundation is presented by the allegation of an actual transfer to, and ownership by, the plaintiff of the cause of action embraced in the original litigation, of which the defendant, Van Wagenen, is alleged to have had notice, and which is to be assumed as the case stands. It is claimed that the action may be maintained as one brought by the plaintiff as assignee of the original debt owing by the O'Neils to Van Wagenen. It would probably be a sufficient answer to this position that such a construction of the complaint was not, so far as appears, claimed on the trial. But a more satisfactory answer is that such was not, in fact, the nature of the action. There is no contract between the O'Neils and Van Wagenen set out in the complaint. It alleges, by way of inducement merely, that the O'Neils had a claim or demand against Van Wagenen on *533 contract, amounting to $10,799.35, but what the contract was, whether the claim was for work, labor or services, or for money had or received, or goods sold, or upon what consideration the claim was founded, is not intimated. The pleader evidently commenced his action on the theory that his cause of action wasex delicto, the gravamen being the fraudulent and collusive settlement by which he was prevented from prosecuting the action to judgment, and thereby obtaining the fruit of his agreement with the O'Neils. Assuming that, after the discontinuance of the original action, Randall could have brought a suit, as assignee, on the contract between the O'Neils and Van Wagenen, this was not such an action, and the plaintiff is not entitled to any strained construction of his pleading to relieve him from a position in which he intentionally placed himself.

The judgment is right, and it should, therefore, be affirmed.

All concur.

Judgment affirmed.