25 Pa. Super. 552 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1904
Opinion by
The appellant, on July 30,1900, obtained a judgment against her husband, by confession, for $9,000, and on February 11, 1901, entered satisfaction of record. Subsequently she employed Hudson & Howley, attorneys, in a proceeding to have the entry of satisfaction stricken off, and they associated with them, as an attorney, Hunter, the appellee. By agreement with the appellant, the compensation of the attorneys, contingent on success, was fixed at one third of the judgment. The matter was so proceeded in that on September 2, 1902, the entry of satisfaction was stricken off; and on April 7, 1903, after an unsuccessful appeal by the defendant in the judgment, the appellant assigned to Hudson, Howley & Hunter the one-third part of the judgment. On June 8, 1903, Hudson & Howley and the appellant revoked Hunter’s authority as an attorney in the case; and the appellant also presented a petition praying that her assignment to Hunter of $1,000 of the judgment should be stricken from the record. A rule was thereupon granted, which, on September 26, 1903, was discharged.
The appellant alleged, as the ground of her petition, that Hunter had, after the assignment, attempted to prevent a settlement which the parties to the judgment, with Hudson & Howley, had agreed on, and pursued a course which endangered the collection of the judgment, and had thereby “ forfeited any compensation that he may have been entitled to.” On the other hand, the appellee alleges that the settlement was improvident, and open to serious objection from a legal point of view, and that in opposing it he was protecting his own interest, which he believed would be seriously prejudiced by it.
It is not necessary, for the purposes of this case, to balance the alleged advantages and disadvantages of the settlement re