delivered the opinion of the Court.
Isadore Switkes, having sustained an accidental personal injury, duly filed a claim for Workmen’s Compensation with the State Industrial Accident Commission on June 22, 1951. After testimony had been taken on three occasions, the Commission, on June 30, 1952 disallowed the claim on the ground that the injury did not arise out of and in the course of his employment. Switkes died on July 8, 1952, and two days after his death, his lawyers filed in the Court of Common Pleas of Baltimore notice of an appeal (a copy having been served the same day on a member of the Commission) in the following form:
“Isadore Switkes, Claimant, by S. Alfred Mund and Julius G. Maurer, his attorneys, feeling aggrieved at the order and decision of the State Industrial Accident Commission . . . enters an appeal . . .”
On August 1, 1952 the appellees moved to dismiss the appeal because (a) the appellant was dead when it was taken, and (b) the widow and administratrix did not appeal or enter the case within the time allowed by law.
The appellant contends, in effect, that since the employer and insurer, the appellees here, received actual notice of the intention to appeal within the prescribed *343 time, they have not been prejudiced, and the appeal should be considered as having been taken by the widow and administratrix, since she ratified the action taken in the name of her dead husband.
The right to appeal in Workmen’s Compensation cases rests solely on the statute. Section 57 of Article 101 of the Code (1951 Ed.) reads, in its pertinent parts, as follows:
“Any employer, employee, beneficiary or person feeling aggrieved by any decision of the Commission affecting his interests under this Article, may have the same reviewed by a proceeding in the nature of an appeal and initiated in the . . . Courts . . . having jurisdiction. . . No such appeal shall be entertained unless notice of appeal shall have been served personally upon some member of the Commission within thirty days following the rendition of the decision appealed from. . .”
The appeal may be taken only by an employer, an employee, or a “person feeling aggrieved by any decision of the Commission affecting his interests under this Article. . .” Certainly, the dead man cannot be regarded as coming within any of the categories. This Court said in
Billingslea v. Smith,
In Owings v. Owings, 3 Gill & J. 1, 4, a decree of the Chancellor was passed in favor of the defendant. An appeal to this Court was prayed by the solicitor for the complainant, which was allowed, the record was brought up and there was an appearance for the defendant. A motion to dismiss was filed, which alleged that the appellant had died before the appeal was prayed. The *344 Court held, that the existing relevant statutes (now codified as Sections 81 and 83 of Article 5 of the Annotated Code of Maryland, 1951) did not apply to appeals brought in the name of a dead person. The heirs of the appellant entered the case after the time for appeal had expired. The Court held this to be of no significance and said that the appearance of counsel- for the appellee in order to move to dismiss: “. . . could not have the effect, to render the mere sending up the record, and docketing the case in the name of one who was dead, a good and available appeal.
“It was not a mere irregularity, but a complete and radical defect.” The appeal was dismissed.
Goldschmid v. Meline,
After the decision in the Goldschmid case, the Legislature, in 1898, enacted what is now Section 85 of Article 5 of the Code (1951 Ed.), to provide that if any party plaintiff or defendant shall die either before or after judgment or decree, “. . . the heir, executor, administrator or other proper person may, if he thinks proper, suggest the death and become a party in the place' of such deceased party, and pray an appeal or writ of *345 error, . . .; provided such appeal or writ of error be prayed within the time prescribed in this article.”
Not only has there been express legislative recognition that the death of a party should not extend the time within which an appeal must be taken, by whomever in such case may be authorized to take it, but this Court has so held in
Hopper v. Jones,
The appellant relies on
Bramble v. Shields, supra.
There, the appeal was taken from an order of the In
*346
dustrial Accident Commission in the name of William Shields, by his attorneys. A motion to dismiss was filed on the ground that Shields was insane at the time the appeal was taken. Thereafter, an amended petition was filed in the names of Shields and his wife, as wife and next friend. This Court refused to dismiss the appeal. There are two reasons, at least, why the case is not controlling. First, the ground of decision in this Court was that no exception was taken and no bill of exception was filed, so that the ruling of the Court was held to be not open to review. Second, in
Alexander v. Rose,
If it be considered that the lawyers were acting on their own, rather than acting for their deceased client, the position of the appellants would not be improved. Ordinarily, an attorney acting for himself cannot take an appeal from an order or judgment which affects the interest of his client. In
National Park Bank v. Lanahan,
In
Bosley v. Dorsey,
It is elementary that ordinarily the death of the principal revokes an agency and terminates the power of the agent to act. This rule includes the agency embodied in the relationship of client and attorney.
Poe, Pleading and Practice,
Tiff. Ed., Vol. 2, Sec. 11, says succinctly: “And so, too, it is settled that the death of the client terminates the authority of the attorney.”
Estate of Young,
If it be argued that this general rule is not applicable where the authority of the agent is coupled with an interest, the short answer is that this is not such a case. In
Karr, Hammond & Darnall v. Shirk,
Certainly, if, in the
Karr
case, the client principal had died, the lawyer-agents could not have successfully maintained that they had an interest which survived his death and were thus authorized to continue to litigate. For a power to be irrevocable because coupled with an interest, the interest must be in the subject matter of
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the power — substantially an estate in it — and not merely in the proceeds, benefits or gains which will arise or flow from the exercise of the power.
Mechem,
work cited, Sec. 570; and
Bowman v. Ledbetter,
1935,
That their interest in a potential fee does not authorize an appeal seems to be demonstrated by the Workmen’s Compensation Article. The general right of appeal is given, as we have seen, by Section 57 of that Article. Section 58 provides that no person shall charge or collect any compensation for legal services in connection with any claim under the Workmen’s Compensation Article unless it is approved by the Commission; when so approved, it shall “. . . become a lien upon the compensation awarded . . .” and shall be paid from that compensation only as the Commission directs. The Commission is given power on the application of “any party in interest” to hear and determine all questions concerning fees and may order any lawyer to refund any portion of any charge for legal services. The Section concludes: “Orders of the Commission regulating payments and refunds for legal services may be enforced in the courts of this State, or may be appealed from in like manner as awards for compensation under this Article”. It is evident that the right of a lawyer to litigate, or appeal from the lower court decision, concerning a fee, arises by virtue of this Section, and is limited to the right to the fee and its size, and to the obligation to refund. Put differently, the Section says that a lawyer is a party in interest only when he has been granted or denied a fee, and in almost every instance, this is only after compensation has been awarded. If a lawyer had been deemed by the Legislature to be a party aggrieved whose interest was affected, under Section 57, it would not have been necessary or appropriate to give a specific right of appeal
*350
as to fees in Section 58.
Cranston v. Industrial Commission,
The order of the Court which substituted the widow of Isadore Switkes as an appellant, as widow and as administratrix, conferred no rights upon her in either capacity, since it came too late and was passed after the motion to dismiss had been filed. It could not be considered a ratification of the appeal which had been taken earlier, because there was nothing to ratify, that appeal having been a nullity. As the Court said in Owings v. Owings, supra, “But there was no appeal properly made, or depending here, and the mere appearance of the heirs . . . does not stand in the way of the motion to dismiss; their appearance being without authority, and the case standing, as if no such appearance had been entered.” The pending appeal has some similarity to the case of In re Cahoon’s Will (Del. 1951), supra. A lawyer, who was on a contingent fee basis, had been directed to take an appeal in a will contest. His client died and he filed the appeal in the name of the deceased, by him as attorney. Letters testamentary were granted after the time for appeal had passed. The appeal was dismissed. The Court said at page 921, of 82 A. 2d: “. . . I think the appeal from the Register of Wills to this Court, . . . after her death, as to her, is a nullity. The death . . . completely severed the pre-existing relationship of attorney and client.” The Court then continue : “There can be no substitution of parties appellant in the present case, since there was no legally existing appellant at the time the appeal was filed, or at any subsequent time thereafter for whom the executrix . . . can now be substituted.”
We find that no appeal from the Accident Commission was taken in this case within the time prescribed by law, the attempt to do so by the lawyers having been of no effect.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.
