Appellees, plaintiffs below, brought this action in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia for the purpose of establishing an equitable lien against a certain fund recovered under .a contract between them and appellant, Harry Ward-man, for the appointment of a receiver, and for general relief.
It appears that plaintiffs are accountants and tax specialists engaged in reрresenting taxpayers before the Bureau of Internal Revenue. They are copartners, operating under the firm name of Leopold & Rindler. In 1924 Wardman consulted Rindler with reference to securing a refund on his income tax for the year 1921, and the following written contract of employment was entered into between the parties:
“November 20, 1924.
“Mr. Harry Wardman,
“1410 K Street, N. W.,
“Washington, D. C.
“Dear Sir:
“We hereby agree to handle your 1921 income tax matter, including the filing of claims, Briеfs, and all other necessary papers, and appearing at conferences in Washington, for the following consideration :
“You are to pay us thirty-three and one-third (33⅓%) per cent of the total amount which we are successful in having refunded to you on the amount paid by you for the taxable year 1921.
“We are -to incur all expenses without reimbursement from you. In the event we are unsuccessful, you are to рay us nothing, either in the way of a fee or expenses.
“Very truly yours,
“Leopold and Rindler,
“By Milton Rindler.
“Accepted: Harry Wardman.”
Simultaneously with the execution of this contract, Wardman executed to the plaintiffs a power of attorney, in which he constituted and appointed them “his true and lawful agents for him and in his name, place and stead to do any and all acts that he might do in the matter of adjusting his Federal Income Tax for the year 1921 * * * with full power of substitution.” Plaintiffs filed this power of attоrney with *278 the Income Tax Unit of the Treasury Department, and represented Wardman before the Commissioner of Internal Revenue pursuant to their contract of employment. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue decided adversely to the contentions of the plaintiffs, and found a deficiency against Wardman of $12,074.51. Plaintiffs in the meantime had employed one Hamel, an attorney of Washington, D. C., to assist them in adjusting the matter and, under the power of substitution authorized in the power of attorney, executed and delivered their power of attorney to Hamel and the other members of his firm, constituting them as “their true and lawful attorneys for them and in their name, place and stead, to do any and all acts that they might do in the matter of adjusting before the Treasury Department the Federal Income Tax for the year 1921 of said Harry Ward-man.”
In рursuance of this employment Hamel, as attorney for Wardman, filed his verified petition with the United States Board of Tax Appeals for a redetermination of the deficiency found by the commissioner, and hearing on this petition was set for February 28, 1929. On February 9, 1929, because of differences which arose between plaintiffs and Hamel on the subject of a cash retainer fee, which Hamel insisted should be obtained from Wardman, the contract between plaintiffs and Hamel was terminated.
, , Thereafter, at the suggestion o.f Ward-man, plaintiffs employed Meredith M. Daubin and Daniel Thew Wright to carry on the proceedings before the Board.of Tax Appeals, and m the federal courts. Flam-tiffs agreed to pay these attorneys one-half of the fee which they received from Ward-man, less one-half of any retainer (excluding actual disbursements) received by Daubin and Wright from Wardman. Daubin entered his appearance before the board, and on hearing the decision of the commissioner was affirmed.
Thereafter Daubin filed a motion to feet aside the decision and to reopen the case. After the hearing of this motion, the board vacated its order and directed the case to be placed on the day calendar of April 14, 1930, “for the introduction of evidence relative to the net income and invested capital of the petitioner for the year 1921.” Upon such hearing, the board found that there was an overpayment for the year 1921 in the amount of $22,437.09. An appeal from that decision was taken by the General Counsel for the Commissioner of Internal Revenue to this court, where the decision of the Board was affirmed. Helvering v. Wardman,
At the conclusion of the trial the court below entered a final decree for plaintiffs In the sum of $6,302.28, with interest thereon at 6 per cent, per annum from June 6, 1934, and costs of suit, which sum Edelin and Daubin, as trustees, were directed to pay out of the $8,000 held by them, the remainder to be paid to Daniel Thew Wright From the decree this appeal was taken.
Appellant insists that the contract is void and unenforceable at law because it is a contract of champerty and maintenance; that the lien claimed by the plaintiffs is void and of no effect, being contrary to the provisions of section 3477, Rev.St. (as amended May 27, 1908, 31 U.S.C.A. § 203), and that prior to February 25, 1929, plaintiffs abandoned said contract and the prosecution of said claim, and that defendant *279 Wardman discharged them and employed Daubin and Wright in their stead.
Taking up the last contention first, it is sufficient to say that on the record the court below found that there was no discharge of plaintiffs or abandonment of their contract. With this finding we agree. This contention merits no further consideration.
With respect to the charge of champerty and maintenance, it will be noted that the contract provides: “We are to incur all expenses without reimbursement from you. In the event we are unsuccessful, you are to pay us nothing, either in the way of a fee or expenses.” It appears that Wardman paid the $10 filing fee for the petition in the action before the Board of Tax Appeals. It would appear that the term “expenses,” as used in the contract and as construed by the parties, had reference to the personal expеnses of the plaintiffs, and not to court costs and other legal fees.
There is a well-defined distinction between contracts for bringing suit in court, where the compensation of the attorney is to be derived from the amount recovered, and in the event of defeat he is to be without any compensation whatever, and contracts where the claim is sought to be recovered against the government or agencies of the government.
In Taylor v. Bemiss,
The distinction between a contract for a contingent fee in a case where it relates to a lawsuit, and in a case where it relates to the recovery of a claim against the government, is clearly pointed out in the case of Manning v. Sprague,
The distinction between an action before the Commissioner of Internal Revenue and the Board of Tax Appeals to recover a tax unlawfully collected, and a suit at law in the prоper court, is apparent from the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Old Colony Trust Co. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
We think it clearly appears that the contract here is not one to conduct litigation in the courts in the ordinary sense, but to recover a claim from the government, *280 and therefore comes within the rule that such contracts are not champertous.
Coming now to the question of whether an equitable lien was created in favor of the plaintiffs, it becomes necessary to look to the terms of the contract. That instrument provided that, in the event of success, the plaintiffs’ compensation should be paid out-of the fund recovered. There is nothing in the entire transaction to indicate that the plaintiffs were to look to Wardman personally for payment of their compensation. It is generally held, where an attorney contracts for the prosecution of a case for a contingent fee, payable out of the fund recovered, that an equitable lien is created against the fund and attaches to it when it is recovered.
In the case of Barnes v. Alexander,
This court, in Sanborn v. Maxwell,
But it is insisted here that, while this rule may apply to the establishment of an attorney’s lien for fees earned under a contingent fee contract, the plaintiffs here were not attorneys and that the rule is, therefore, not applicable to this case.
In McCormack v. Harrah,
Thus it would seem that on the question of whether or not an equitable lien is created upon the fund under the circumstances detailed in the present case, it is immaterial whether it be for an attorney’s fee, as in the Barnes and Ingersoll Cases; or for the fee of an engineer, as in the Harrah Case; or for the fee of tax specialists, as in-the instant case.
That it was intended under the contract that the plaintiffs should be paid out of the money recovered is eniphasized by the stipulation entered into on thе filing of the bill in the court below. This indicated a clear intention on the part of the parties not only that plaintiffs should look to the fund recovered, but that a lien should be created thereon.
It is next urged that the agreement is void under section 3477, R.S. (as amended by Act May 27, 1908, 35 Stat. 411, 31 U.S.C. § 203 [31 U.S.C.A. § 203]), which forbids the assignment of claims against the government unless they are executed in the presence of at least two witnesses, after the allowаnce of the claim, the ascertainment of the amount due, and the issuance of a warrant for the payment thereof. There was no assignment here of any claim against the government. The contract merely looked to the future, toward a possible recovery, and provided for payment of plaintiffs’ fees out of the sum to be recovered. There is a sharp distinction, which the courts recognizе, between a void attempt to assign a claim pending against the government and an attempt to impress upon a fund an equitable lien for a fee to be paid under contract from the amount recovered. Until there had been an award to Wardman, no interest in the fund in question accrued in favor of plaintiffs, since no part of the claim against the government had been assigned to them. But when the amount to bе paid had been ascertained, and all that remained to be done was the delivery of a draft to Wardman for the money found to be due, then plaintiffs’ lien attached and became enforceable in an equity proceeding against the fund, which still remained in the hands of the government.
This court has passed upon this question in a number of cases. In Sanborn v. Maxwell, supra, where an award had been made and the fund wаs in the possession of the United States, the lower court appointed a receiver to take over the fund until the rights of the claimant against the fund had been determined, and we there said (
We again had the same question before us in the case of Roberts v. Consaul,
Appellant Wardman relies mainly upon the recent case of Conlon v. Adamski,
The decree is affirmed, with costs.
