139 N.Y.S. 666 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1913
It has been adjudged in this case that plaintiff’s intestate, Frank 0. Sargent, acquired an attorney’s lien upon the cause of action of defendant McLeod against the defendant railroad company, which lien did not cease, ipso facto, upon Sargent’s death, but attached to the $5,000 paid by the railroad company in settlement of the cause of action to the extent of one-third thereof, and judgment has been awarded foreclosing such lien against both defendants to the amount of $1,666.66, with interest, execution to issue first against the defendant McLeod, and upon return thereof unsatisfied then against the defendant raih'oad company. The findings of fact upon which these legal conclusions were reached are that Sargent in his lifetime performed all the services proper and necessary to protect and promote the interests of McLeod, and that such services were the cause of the offer of the railroad company to pay $5,000 in set
We think these findings of fact are sufficiently supported by the evidence. It did not appear that McLeod incurred any expense whatever after Sargent’s death in reference to his case against the railroad company. He did not employ another attorney, nor did he, so far as the evidence discloses, accept in settlement any less sum than he would have been. willing to accept had Sargent been living.
We think the judgment awarded is sustained by the weight of authority. In Clark v. Gilbert (26 N. Y. 219) the estate of an engineer, who had been employed under contract to erect certain docks in California, and who for his services was to receive certain compensation monthly, and upon the completion of the work one-third of the profits realized by the principal contractor, by whom he was employed, and who died before the completion of the contract, was held entitled to recover such proportion of one-third of the whole profits as the amount and cost of the work done at the time of his death bore to the entire cost of the work when completed. In the course of the opinion in that case it is said: “ By applying the rule to this case, that the servant, when prevented by sickness or death from fully performing a contract for his personal services, may recover compensation for the services performed, at the rate specified in the contract, subject to the right of the employer tti reduce the same, by proof of the damages, if any, sustained by him in consequence of. the servant not being able to complete the stipulated term of service, justice would be done to both parties, and the plaintiff would recover one-third of the profits earned, at the time of the testator’s death, on the contracts the defendant and his associates had with the government of the United States, not only for c,onstructing the dry dock and the lease of it, but also the basin and railway, after deducting the damages, if any, the defendant sustained in consequence of the sickness and death of the testator, prior to the completion of the work.” It was also held in that case that it was not a valid objection to the application of the rule that at the time the testator died the profits earned upon the contracts could not have been ascertained.
And from Story on Bailments
The conclusion reached by this learned judge is stated by him as follows: “ The conclusion, then, is, that where the performance of work and labor is a condition precedent to entitle the party to recover, a fulfillment must be shown; yet that where performance is prevented or rendered impossible by the sickness or death of the party, a recovery may be had for the labor actually done. This is not out of harmony with principle or adjudged cases, and is certainly in harmony with the rules of common honesty and strict justice. * * * The contract was in fact discharged by the act of Grod, and its chief consequence was to measure the amount of the plaintiff’s damages, or to regulate the compensation to which the plaintiff was entitled, though his remedy was as upon a quantum meruit.”
That an attorney’s lien survives his death under contract for a contingent fee is held in Dodge v. Schell (10 Abb. N. C. 465). In that case, Judge Wallace in the United States Circuit Court, on the authority of Wolfe v. Howes (supra) and other cases, held: “ That the executrix of Douglas [the deceased attorney] has a valid claim against the plaintiffs for the value of his services up to the time of his death, the entire performance of the contract, on his part, being prevented by his death. ”
We think that Badger v. Celler (41 App. Div. 599) is not in conflict with the authorities above referred to. In that case the controversy was submitted to the court without action as to the right of the executor of a deceased attorney to recover for his services rendered to the defendant in his lifetime under a contract for a contingent fee, where the action in which the services were rendered had not then been determined, and where it was impossible to say whether the action would ultimately be successful. It was very properly held in that case that there could be no recovery, because the defendaht had recovered nothing upon the claim or demand which the attorney had been engaged in prosecuting upon the basis of a contingent fee. In the course of the opinion in that case Mr. Justice Ingraham, for the court, says: “We are not now concerned with a determination of the question whether an attorney, employed under such a contract as the one in question, who has rendered valuable services which result in his client’s obtaining a substantial recovery upon the claim which he was employed to enforce, although such recovery should happen after the death of the attorney, would be entitled to some compensation for the services which he had rendered.”
We conclude that plaintiff has been properly allowed a recovery to the extent of the one-third contracted by McLeod to be paid to Sargent for his services in bringing about a settlement before trial, inasmuch as the services rendered by Sargent are
We think the judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
All concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.
See § 36 and notes. — [Rbp.