16 W. Va. 378 | W. Va. | 1880
delivered the opinion of the Court:
The principal question involved in this appeal is, whether James F. Patton has an attorney’s lien for his fees on the fund in the case of Renick v. Ludington, coming to his client Renick, for his fees in this and other suits, which had been prosecuted by him for the recovery of the claim in favor of Renick v. Ludington, and which claim was recognized and a decree rendered therefor in this suit, as against the assignees without notice of this fund claiming by virtue of assignments made in their favor by Renick. The first inquiry is, whether he
In the English courts the claim of an attorney, to have his fees and disbursements in a suit paid out of judgment he obtains, has been recognized. The courts held that this lien of the attorneys on the judgment in the case could not vary or affect the rights of the defendant in the case; and while therefore, if the defendant paid to the plaintiff after notice by the plaintiff’s attorney not to do so till his fees were paid, he could be compelled to pay the judgment again to the extent of the fees of the plaintiff’s attorney, it being a lien on the judgment. But if paid in good faith without such notice, its payment could not be aghin insisted upon. See Read v. Dapper, 6 T. R. 360; Ormerod v. Tate, 1 East 464. In carrying out these views the courts of common pleas held, that the lien of the plaintiff’s attorney on the judgment was subordinate to the defendant’s right to offset. This view Avas held in the English chancery courts; while the Court of King’s Bench held, that this lien was superior to the defendant’s right to such set-off. See Hull v. Ody, 2 B. & P. 28 ; Ensden v. Darley, 4 B. & P. 22; Simpson et al. v. Lamb, 50 Eng. L. & E. 59; Taylor v. Popham, 15 Ves. 79; Rhodes ex parte, 15 Ves. 541; 4 Bligh N. S. 604. Now under the rule of the courts, 2 W. IV., the plaintiff’s attorney in England has a lien for his fees in the suit, and no offset is allowed to prejudice his claim.
Whether this lien of the plaintiff’s attorney on the judgment he obtained for his fees and - disbursements in the case, should be recognized by the courts in this country, has been in some cases questioned and in others denied. In England attorneys are recognized officers of the court, and are entitled to fees for services performed by them, as are our clerks. These fees are ascertained and paid, and are recognized in the taxation of the costs,
But many of the American courts dissent from these views, and hold, that an attorney has a lien on the judgment in favor of his client for his compensation as an attorney in the obtaining of such judgment, whether his fee is taxed in the costs or not by law, and if so taxed, his lien is not restricted to the amount so authorized to be taxed'by law, unless by the law he is prohibited from receiving of his client more than the amount so authorized to be taxed as a fee. The English rule, if it only secured legal costs, they alone being there allowed by law as a compensation, would by irresistable conclusion secure the compensation agreed upon by the parties, when none is provided by law. But the lien in England is not confined to the legal fees taxed, it extends to all the disbursements of the plaintiff’s attorney. The same reasons, which in England extend the attorney’s lien to these disbursements, would extend it to a charge for services, where such charge is proper, as it is in this country. The attorney according to the English decisions, occupies the position of an assignee of the judgment, who takes it subject to all the rights and equities attached to it. The lien of an attorney on his client’s judgment was allowed in England, not because his fees were taxed in the costs, but because it was founded in natural equity, which forbids that a party should enjoy the fruits of the cause without satisfying the legal demands of his attorney; Wilkins v. Carmichael, Douglass 100, as said
The courts, who hold these views, decide that the taxed costs of an attorney in England have no merit or justice superior to the claim of counsel for reasonable compensation in this day and country; nor does the former contribute more to the success of the party he represents in England, than does the latter in this country ; and therefore there should be in reason and justice a lien in this country on a client’s judgment for a just compensation for his counsel, for the same reasons as tlm attorney’s lien is allowed in England. Substantially these views are held by many American courts; and they decide that the attorney has a lien for his fees or just compensation in a suit on the judgment he obtains. See McDonald et al. v. Leroy Napier, 14 Ga. 89; Warfield v. Campbell et al., 38 Ala. 527; Carter v. Bennett, 6 Fla. 214; Andrews v. Morse, 12 Conn. 447; Stewart v. Flowers, 44 Miss. 513 (7 American R. 707); Hunt v. McClanahan, 1 Heisk. 503; Rooney v. Second Avenue R. R. Co., 18 N. Y. 371; Fox v. Fox, 24 How. Pr. 409. In some cases a distinction has been attempted to be made between a case, where the attorney has agreed upon a certain fee and when there has been no such agreement but the amount of the fee depends upon a quantum meruit; but there is no sound reason for such a distinction. This distinction was supposed to exist in the New York courts at one time, but it was properly repudiated in Fox v. Fox, 24 How. Pr. R. 409. In my judgment the weight of reason and authority is in favor of recognizing the attorney’s lien on a judgment in favor of his client for all services, which he had rendered in obtaining such judg-! ment. This lien is in the nature of an equitable lien (see Brown & Reid v. Bigley, 3 Cooper (Tenn.) Chy. 623) and is based on the natural equity, that the plaintiff
In McClandish v. Keen et al., 13 Gratt. 624, Judge Lee after first showing that the vendor’s implied lien is but little countenanced anywhere, and is repudiated in many States, and is especially inappropriate in Virginia, admits that it has nevertheless been recognized in Virginia and he proceeds: “As the lien is generally presumed, it would seem that the burden is upon the purchaser of showing that it is waived, Hughes v. Kearney, 1 Sch. & Lef. 132; Machreth v. Symmons, 15 Ves. 239; Garson v. Green, 1 John. Chy. 308. But this the purchaser can do not only by showing an express agreement to that effect, but also by reasonable inference and implication from the circumstances. Now it would seem well settled that the mere taking of a bond, promissory note, bill of exchange, or a simple covenant of the vendor himself will not repel the lien, because, as said by Lord Eldon, it may have been given not to supersede the lien but for the purpose of ascertaining the debt and countervailing the receipt endorsed upon the conveyance. But it is equally clear that when a distinct and independent security is taken, either of other property, or the responsibility of a third person, the party having carved out his own security, the law will not come to his aid by creating another, and the equitable lien will be
In Machreth v. Symmons, 15 Ves. 329, White and Tudor’s Leading Cases in Equity vol. 1 side page 298 top page 454, Lord Eldon says: “The case put by the Master of the Polls in Naine v. Prowse, 6 Ves. 760, of a mortgage upon another estate also affords strong, perhaps not quite conclusive, evidence against the lien, considering the value of the mortgaged estate in general is much more than the amount of the money. It does not however appear to me a violent conclusion, as between vendor and vendee, that notwithstanding the mortgage, the lien should subsist. The principle has been carried this length : that the lien exists, unless an intention, and a manifest intention, that it shall not exist, appears. That the taking of independent security will not necessarily waive the vendor’s lien may be inferred from Kyles v. Tait’s adm’r, 6 Gratt. 44. The true rule is, that the waiver arising from the acceptance of collateral security is presumptive, and may be rebutted by evidence from other circumstances, of an intention not to rely exclusively upon it, but to retain the equitable lien. See Campbell v. Baldwin et al., 2 Humph. 248-258 ; Marshall v. Christmass et al., 3 Humph. 616, 617; Prime v. Macon and Western Railroad Co., 3 Kelley 333, 342. From these principles it necessarily follows, that the
I conclude, therefore, that so much of said decree of November 22, 1878, as decided that the defendant, J. F. Patton, by the assignment taken fixed the plan as well as the amount of his fee, and that in view of the facts in their answers he is not entitled to an attorney’s lien against the assignees of the plaintiff, Rehick, upon the debt mentioned in his petition, must be reversed, set aside and annulled, and also so much of said decree as is based on said error of said circuit court; and the appellant must recover of the appellees, John W. Dunn and of J. P. Reid and James A. Reid, administrators of J. J. Reid, to be levied of the estate of their intestate in their hands to be administered, his costs about his appeal in this court expended; and this court, proceeding to render such decree as the court below ought to have rendered, doth adjudge, order and decree that the defendant, J. F, Patton, is entitled to an attorney’s lien upon the debt mentioned in his petition, and that such lien has priority over any of the assignees of B. F. Renick of portions of said debt; and this cause is remanded to the circuit court of Greenbrier, with instructions to so modify and correct the said decree of November 22, 1878, as shall make it conform to this prior right, of J. F. Patton to have his claim set out in his petition first satisfied out of said debt named in his petition, and also to so modify and correct, if necessary, the decree of November 17, 1877, in the cause of D. F. Ford & Son et al. v. B. F. Renick et al., and all other decrees in said cause or in the cause of B. F. Renick et al. v. Samuel C. Ludington, as shall make them consist with this priority of lien of J. F. Patton to his claim set up in his petition on the debt named in his petition; and these causes are to be further proceeded with in the circuit court of Greenbrier on the principles laid down in this opinion, and accord
Deoree Beversed. Cause Bemanded.