Thе respondent Reder appeals from a final decree entered by a judge of the Superior Court (the second judge) directing the clerk of the courts to pаy to the petitioner, an attorney at law, the sum of $1,500 plus costs of $12.50, and to pay the balance ($10.27) to Reder. The second judge made findings of fact. The evidence is reported. The petitioner is deceased. The cause is pursued by his executor.
The decree now before us is the result of a hearing on a petition “to establish a lien” under G. L. c. 221, § 50, following unsuccessful efforts by the petitioner to get from Reder the balance of compensation alleged to be due for professional sеrvices. '
We observed in
Elbaum
v.
Sullivan,
The difficulty arises from that part of the decree which orders the clerk of the courts to pay the stated sums to the petitioner. This order, we infer, must be based on paragraph 9 of the second judge’s “Findings and Order” which reads: “The Court further finds petitioner entitled to his lien and that this sum mаy and should be paid with the checks held by the clerk, together with costs” (emphasis supplied). The finding requires an examination of the evidence.
The evidence and faсts of record show that the petitioner had represented Reder as defendant in a suit in equity brought by Reder’s wife to determine the ownership of certain property. Included in the property were several stock certificates and bankbooks. See
Reder
v.
Reder,
*155 After Reder had exhausted his rights of appeal in the original suit another judge of the Superior Court (the first judge) ordered that his original decree, as modified by this court, be carried out by instructing the petitioner to surrender the bankbooks and stock certificates. The petitioner then orally and for the first time claimed that he had a lien on the stock certificates. He made the statement of the claim to opposing counsel when he turned over the intangibles, pursuant to the first judge’s, order, at the bank, and asked that the message be relayed to the first judge. On March 10, 1967, the first judge, who had earlier entered the decree in the original suit, made а supplementary order which provided in substance that the petitioner file on or before April 10, 1967, “a petition to establish his lien according to law,” and that the clerk of the courts retain two bank checks payable to Reder and indorsed by him (in the total sum of $1,522.72), “in lieu of . . . [[the petitioner’s] alleged hen on said bank books and stock cеrtificates.” The supplementary order also provided that if the petitioner’s claim and lien should be finally established in his favor, then enough of the sums should be paid by the clerk to satisfy the lien, with balance to Reder. If the claim and hen should not be established, then all of the funds should be payable to Reder and his attorney.
The petition under consideration was filed on April 10, 1967. It recites that it was filed to establish a hen for an attorney’s fee in accordance with G. L. c. 221, § 50, as appearing in St. 1945, c. 397, § 1, which reads in pertinent part: “From the authorized commencement of . . . [a] proceeding in any court . . . the attorney who appears for a chent in such proceeding shall have a hen for his reasonable fees and expenses . . . upon the . . . decree ... in his chent’s favor entered ... in such proceeding, and upon the proceeds derived therefrom. Upon request of the chent or of the attorney, the court in which the proceeding is pending or, if the proceeding is not pending in a court, the superior court may determine and enforce the hen . . ..”
Reder argues, and we think rightly, that since there was
*156
no decree in his favor there was nothing to which the statutory lien could attach. As noted in
Elbaum
v.
Sullivan,
The evidence presented in support of the petition tends to show that the рetitioner sought to assert, if anything, a possessory or retaining lien. The second judge’s findings show that he treated the case on that basis.
Whether in this Commonwealth an attorney hаs a hen for his fees on the moneys, papers, books or other property of his chent which come into his possession has never been squarely decided. In
White
v.
Harlow, 5
Gray, 463, and in
Simmons
v.
Almy,
The facts of the case before us do not require that we make a broad determination that an attorney may claim a possessory hen in this Commonwealth. We are convinced that on the faсts of the case no possessory hen could be claimed by the petitioner. Although the stock certificates and bankbooks were received by the petitioner from Reder in the course of their professional relationship, it is clear
*157
that they were to be held not by the petitioner alone but with another, and for a special purpose which was inconsistent with the petitioner’s claim of lien: a neutral depository to which neither counsel had exclusive access pending further ordеr of the court. This is not an uncommon type of arrangement, partaking of the nature of a trusteeship, when the right to intangibles is disputed by parties. Indeed, in his correspondеnce with Reder, the petitioner referred to himself as “escrow agent” and to his successor attorney as “escrow agent in my stead.” To permit one who has so аcted to assert a possessory lien on the property as security for professional services would not only discourage similar arrangements in the future, but would be inсonsistent with the fiduciary duty voluntarily assumed by the attorney.
Spencer
v. Spencer,
The proper remedy for the petitioner was an action at law. On that aspect of the case, he has рrevailed.
The final decree must be reversed. A final decree is to be entered establishing Reder’s indebtedness to the petitioner’s executor in the sum of $1,512.50 and ordering thаt the funds held by the clerk of the courts for Bristol County, pursuant to the order of the first judge entered March 10, 1967, be delivered forthwith to John A. Reder and his attorney.
So ordered.
Notes
Meline, Attorney’s Fees and Liens,. and Procedure Relating to Them, with a Proposed Act, 21 Mass. L. Q. (No. 1) 82, 85. Black, Attorneys' Liens in Massachusetts, 24 B. U. L. Rev. 224, 228-229 (1944). Cf.
Dunklee
v.
Locke,
