133 N.Y.S. 173 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1911
The plaintiff, who is an attorney and counselor at law, brings this action to have adjudged valid a certain assignment by defendant of part of her interest, both principal and income, in the residuary estate of George Bell, deceased, and to enforce his rights thereunder. '
George Bell died on December 9, 1881, leaving a last will and testament wherein, among other things, he provided that the net income of his residuary estate should be divided by his trustees between his nephews, George Barker and Charles Barker, and his niece, Mary Leavitt, share and share alike, during the life of his daughter, Catherine B. Bell, less such sum, not exceeding $15,000 per annum, as the trustees might deem necessary for the support and maintenance of his daughter; and upon the death .of his daughter leaving no lawful issue her surviving, the residuary estate was devised and bequeathed in equal shares to his said nephews and niece. Catherine Bell, the daughter of the decedent, is still living and is of the age of seventy years, unmarried and incompetent, a committee of her person and property having been appointed, and she was incompetent at the time of her father’s death. His estate amounted to upwards of $1,000,000. The proper construction to be given to the will had been a matter of controversy for some years, and litigation had ensued, among the. questions there involved and bitterly contested being (1) whether the interest of the nephews and niece under the wiE was a vested or a contingent one, and (2) whether such interest was alienable. One of the nephews, Charles Barker, claimed that the interest was contingent and inalienable, in order to defeat a certain assignment of an interest therein
The plaintiff had been an office associate of Mr. Tarrant Putnam, who was attorney for George Barker as one of the trustees of the Bell estate, that having been the sole business of Barker for the twenty-five years preceding his death.
Plaintiff by reason of his association with Mr. Putnam and his participation in various litigation, became acquainted with the details of the estate and of the interests of the various parties therein and had earned the confidence of Mr. Barker, whose will he had- drawn, and who- advised his wife that the plaintiff would be a good 'man to advise her; so that when the daughters opposed- the probate of the father’s will she retained the plaintiff as her attorney. The will was admitted to probate in March, 1907, and plaintiff was paid by Mrs. Barker for his services in that proceeding.
Thereafter plaintiff conferred with Mrs. Barker regarding her interests under her husband’s will, and she was advised by plaintiff that the next thing to be done was to establish the interest of George Barker in the Bell estate. - Mrs. Barker demurred to so doing, saying that her husband had always told her that there was nothing to it, as he would have to outlive Catherine Bell before he would get anything. To this plaintiff replied that he had previously been of that opinion but he had changed his view and that there was considerable to it, to which she replied that she did not want to bother and did not want to waste any money and proposed to keep the money she had. Plaintiff told her that she was foolish not to assert her claim for the interest in the Bell remainder. But she replied “no,” that she proposed to keep what she had,
Plaintiff then suggested that she talk it over with somebody and write to her brother Alfred, which she refused to do, saying she wanted to talk it over with nobody, as she was satisfied. Plaintiff then promised to prepare a contract in accordance with this arrangement. But there was some delay in doing so, and it was not prepared until some two months afterwards, in May, 1907. Plaintiff claims that he repeatedly asked Mrs. Barker to consult some one about it, suggesting and furnishing names of persons with whom she might confer, all .of which she refused to do. At this time Mrs. Barker was the possessor in her own right of cash to the extent of $50,000, $45,000 of which represented the proceeds of the sale of real estate at Baldwins, L. I., given to her by her husband, the remaining $5,000 being the amount realized from the auction sale of furniture and personal effects upon' the same property. She appears to have had no obligations of any kind. Frequent interviews Were held between plaintiff and Mrs. Barker during this period, averaging five times a week, until June 2, 1907, when she wrote plaintiff a letter informing him that as she was about to go away towards the end of the week to be operated upon, she wanted “ to have that contract signed & my will made before going & do not wish you to put this off any longer.” Plaintiff then invited her to come to his office, which she did, and he again asked her to consult somebody about the agreement, which she refused to do.
The plaintiff reiterated his desire that she should advise with some disinterested party, but upon her continued refusal so to do, he finally suggested that she go with him to see the president of the Broadway Savings Bank, in which institution she was a depositor, and to this'she acceded.
Plaintiff and Mrs. Barker went to the president’s private room and in his presence the agreement was read over to Mrs. Barker, together with the collateral assignment which accompanied it. Mrs. Barker then said that she was satisfied with the agreement
Plaintiff in consideration thereof agreed to render and perform all legal services in any and all suits and proceedings instituted by or against Mrs. Barker affecting in any way her rights and interests in any property -of the Bell estate, including the accounting by Mrs. Barker as. representative of her husband’s estate of his acts as trustee of the Bell estate, and any. services in anywise relating to these matters, including counsel, advice and negotiations; and in the event of a final determination in favor of Mrs. Barker to. perform all, the legal services affecting her interest in the estate, to and including final accounting and distribution. The agreement contained a further clause that in the event of it being finally determined that Mrs. Barker had no interest in the remainder, Mr. Ransom was to make no charges for such services as he might have ■ performed under, the agreement, it being understood between the parties that whatever compensation was received by Ransom for his services to be performed was not to be payable out of the separate estate of Mrs. Barker,' but out
At the time of the execution of this agreement the status of the legal proceedings affecting the.rights and interest of Mrs. Barker was as follows:
An action had theretofore been brought by Gertrude Stringer against George A. Barker and Jacob Berry, as executors and trustees under the last will and testament of . George Bell, deceased, et al., wherein plaintiff claiming that under an assignment from Charles B. Barker of his interest in the George Bell estate.to the extent of $100,000 principal and $5,000 annual income, sued to enforce her rights thereunder. The referee before whom the case had been tried, in passing upon "the questions involved, had decided that the interest of Charles B. Barker, which was similar to that of George A. Barker, was a vested remainder; and the Appellate Division in December, 1905, in disposing of the appeal intimated that such question was not directly involved therein, although in its opinion it said that, if the decision of that question was necessary to the judgment that the assignment was valid and effective, they would be inclined to hold likewise (Stringer v. Barker, 110 App. Div. 37). An appeal was taken from this decision and was pending at the time of the making of the agreement in question. George A. Barker in his lifetime had joined interests with his brother in the Stringer suit and by his answer as trustee of the Bell estate had set up that the interest of his brother under the Bell will was a contingent interest. This position, of course, if sustained, would have determined his own to be a similar contingent one only, and is in harmony with his attitude in relation to the construction of the Bell will down to the time of his death and with his widow’s statement as to what he had told her of the nature of his interest. There was also pending an action brought in the Supreme Court of Westchester county, wherein Lizbeth Bell Scott, one of George Barker’s daughters, sought a construction of the Bell will, so far' as it related to the remainder thereby given to her father, in
It is plaintiff’s contention that he called Mrs. Barker’s attention to the decision of the Appellate Division regarding the proper construction of the Bell will, and the learned court at Special Term by its decision has found that the agreement in question was executed by the defendant without the practice upon her. of any fraud, misrepresentation or concealment by the plaintiff, although he has also found that plaintiff had not stated to the defendant the actual conditions which existed with respect to her husband’s interest in the Bell estate and regarding actual work necessary to be done to protect her rights with sufficient fullness to make her clearly understand the whole situation..
The-plaintiff then began to render services as attorney and counsel for Mrs. Barker in both the Bell and Barker suits. In the case of Stringer v. Young, representing her, he filed a brief in the Court of Appeals reversing the position theretofore uniformly taken by George Barker and urged that the share of Charles Barker, instead of being a contingent remainder, was a vested interest. The Court of Appeals (191 N. Y. 157) in February, 1908, determined that the interest of the nephews was a vested interest and not a contingent one. Plaintiff commenced an action on behalf of Mrs. Barker for an accounting and construction of the Bell will in the county of Yew York, but the suit of Young v. Barker, hereinbefore referred to, was "tried instead. Young v. Barker was an action brought -by the trustees of the Bell estate in Westchester county for the settlement of their accounts and for a construction of the Bell will as to the Barker remainder in which final judgment was entered May 1, 1909. Upon the accounting part of this action plaintiff prepared the accounts of George Barker, as trustee of the estate, and the trustees accounted generally. There were numerous controversies as to the rights of the respective parties and the contentions of Mrs. Barker were fully sustained, an appeal from such judgment having since been affirmed (141 App. Div. 801). There was also a proceeding, Matter of Lea
Upon the following day plaintiff furnished her with a typewritten copy of this statement of' transactions. The first date when defendant made any complaint to plaintiff regarding the extent of his compensation appears to have been on May 6,
Oh June 30, 1909, she married Porte V. Ransom. In July, 1909, she repudiated the assignment in question and notified plaintiff of her refusal to be bound thereby. In her answer the defendant sets up various defenses to the agreement sued upon, among others that she was ill when she signed the assignment, and that plaintiff had fraudulently represented to her that'- it was fair and equitable and due him that it should be signed; but it sufficiently appears that she was fully aware of the nature of the paper, she was signing, that no fraud was perpetrated upon her and that she signed it freely and voluntarily. This applies to both the assignments executed by her.
At the close of the plaintiff’s case defendant offered to stipulate that the court should decide upon a quantum, meruit the amount of the plaintiff’s recovery-and tendered judgment for $22,000 less the amount already paid the plaintiff, being at the rate of $50 per day for the period of time that Mrs. Barker’s affairs were in his hands. This being declined by the plaintiff, after some discussion, defendant was allowed to amend her answer by alleging that the agreement in suit was an agreement between attorney and client and that the court should
The judgment appealed from herein did not set aside or declare invalid the assignment upon which the action was brought, but proceeded upon the theory that as plaintiff had come into a court of equity he could obtain a decree for only so much as equitable doctrines permit. The leading case rélied upon is Whitehead v. Kennedy (69 N. Y. 462), wherein the court said: “The plaintiff on the trial assumed the burden óf proving that the agreement of October 25th, 1865, was just and fair, having in view the general principle that an attorney who seeks to avail himself of a contract made with his client is bound to establish affirmatively that it was made by the client with full knowledge of all the material circumstances known to the attorney, and was in every respect free from fraud on his part, or misconception, on the part of the client, and that a reasonable use was made by the attorney of the confidence reposed in him.. This general principle is firmly established and universally recognized.” To the same effect are Place v. Hayward (117 N. Y. 487) and Nesbit v. Lockman (34 id. 167). But the first case cited was one where the services for which the assignment was given were past services, and the court expressly refused to determine how far section 303 of the Code of Procedure changed the rule when the services were prospective. The two latter cases are those of a gift by client to
The learned court expressly recognized the propriety of contingent fees based upon a percentage basis, although it be altogether disproportionate to what would be reasonable compensation for the lawyer’s services if paid for in cash when rendered. As he said in his opinion (70 Misc. Rep. 30): “Hot only is there long delay in recovery, but services covering years may never be compensated at all. I think that the contingent fee should often be approved, not only in the case of the penniless litigant, but also in the case of the litigant in the position of Mrs. Barker, possessed of but moderate means. One so situated should be able to arrange with some attorney in such a way that if unsuccessful her own funds should remain altogether intact or be diminished only by a moderate retainer; while in return for the risk that his services may thus be thrown away or only in small part compensated, he has a chance of receiving an amount much greater than their cash value. In fact, when a lawyer sues his client upon a quantum meruit, the law as laid down by our courts makes the fee largely contingent upon success. (Randall v. Packard, 142 N. Y. 47.) * * * The contingent fee has long been sustained, not only in this State (Fowler v. Callan, 102 N. Y. 395), but in the Supreme Court of the United States also. (Wylie v. Coxe, 15 How. [U. S.] 415; Stanton v. Embrey, 93 U. S. 548; Ingersoll v. Coram, 211 id. 335.) ”
Section 66 óf the Code of Civil Procedure, as it existed when this agreement was entered into, read as follows, so far as is material to the question herein involved: “The compensation of an attorney or counsellor for his services is governed by agreement, express or implied, which is not restrained by law.” (How Judiciary Law [Consol. Laws, chap. 30; Laws of 1909, chap. 35], §474.) The source of this provision is section, 303 of the Code of Procedure, providing in part: “All statutes •establishing or regulating the costs or fees of attorneys, solicit
In McCoy v. Gas Engine & Power Company (135 App. Div. 771) it was said: “The word ‘unconscionable’ has frequently been applied to contracts made by lawyers for what were deemed exorbitant contingent fees. But by that nothing more
All of these decisions are in accord with Matter of Fitzsimons (174 N. Y. 15), wherein a contingent fee of fifty per cent was upheld. The court said: ‘ ‘ The statute conferred upon, the parties the right to make the contract, and conferred upon the court no authority to malee it for them. If, however, upon a proper examination of the appellant’s claim, it shall be found that the agreement between himself and his client was induced by fraud, or that the compensation provided for was so excessive as to evince a purpose to obtain improper or undue advantage, the court may correct any such abuse.”' In the case
Under all these conditions it cannot be said that any reason
The judgment appealed from must, therefore, be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide the event.
Laughlin and Miller, JJ., concurred.
Prior to the death of the defendant’s husband, the plaintiff had been his attorney. He had been recommended to the defendant by her husband, and immediately after his death slie placed all her affairs in the plaintiff’s hands and depended entirely upon him for legal advice. The dependence of the defendant upon the plaintiff deepened as the various litigations involving the estate of her husband’s uncle, in which her husband was interested, and in relation to her' husband’s estate proceeded. Finally the time came when this- agreement that. plaintiff seeks to enforce was executed. . The services which he undertook to render by this agreement related entirely to services to be rendered in relation to the Bell estate. At that time the opinion had been expressed by the Appellate Division in the Second Department that the remainder was vested, in which' event the defendant’s husband would have been entitled to about $400,000 from the Bell estate. The defendant was reluctant to involve herself in any expense in relation to the litigation in regard to the Bell estate, and the defendant proposed that plaintiff should take the case on a contingent fee. The plaintiff suggested a twenty-five per cent fee, which, if the opinion of the Appellate Division were sustained,' would mean to him for
McLaughlin, J., concurred.
Judgment reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.