28 S.E.2d 263 | Ga. | 1943
1. The motion to dismiss the certiorari is denied.
(a) The ground thereof based on the contention that no motion for rehearing embracing the same contentions as are made in the petition for certiorari was filed in the Court of Appeals, and was finally disposed of by that court adversely to movant, is not supported by the record.
(b) Nor will failure to comply with the recent rule as to specifying omitted parts of the record be treated as cause for dismissal in this case.
2. After an attorney at law is employed, not for a contingent fee, but has filed suit for his client, the latter has the right at any time, with or without cause, to discharge the attorney and on motion to have his name as attorney stricken; but the court in which the suit is pending will not ordinarily permit this to be done until the client has paid or secured the attorney reasonable fees for the services which have already been performed, or otherwise protects the attorney as to his claim for fees already earned; and will enter an appropriate order, with such end in view, before granting the motion to have the name stricken.
"The burden shall be upon petitioner to supply sufficient record to show clearly and fairly the error or errors complained of, as above required. Failure in this respect shall constitute ground for denying the application, or for dismissal of the writ if by inadvertence it was granted on insufficient record.
"For the information of the opposite party and of this court, the petition for certiorari shall contain or have attached thereto a statement enumerating the parts of the record that have been omitted, with sufficient words of description to identify them.
"If the court, after granting an application, should, on motion of the opposite party or upon its own motion, determine that additional record is desirable in order to do full and complete justice in the premises, the petitioner will be required to furnish same, and failure to comply with any order to this effect will be treated as ground for dismissing the writ."
It will be noted that the quoted portions of this rule contain three paragraphs. The first in effect states that failure of petitioner to supply sufficient record to show clearly and fairly the errors complained of shall constitute ground for denying the application or for dismissal of the writ, etc. The third paragraph in effect provides that the failure of petitioner to comply with an order to furnish such additional record as the court deems necessary *31 will be treated as a ground for dismissing the writ. The remaining paragraph of the quoted portion of the rule, though stating that "the petition for certiorari shall contain or have attached thereto a statement enumerating the parts of the record that have been omitted, with sufficient words of description to identify them," does not contain the further statement that such violation of the rule shall be treated as ground for dismissing the writ; but the requirement in this respect states that it is "for the information of the opposite party and of this court." There are many reasons why this requirement of the rule should be complied with; but the rule itself is a new one, and, until there has been an expression from this court construing the same, is susceptible of the construction that it was intended merely for information of the opposite party and of this court, and the absence of a compliance therewith was not intended to be visited with the penalty of dismissal as in the other two instances noted. As a matter of fact the application for certiorari in the instant case does contain all of the record necessary; and among the specifications is the original bill of exceptions, which itself contains a reference to each of the portions of the record which counsel for the respondents insist should have been included. The case before the Court of Appeals arose on a ruling on a motion in the nature of a rule brought by Lewis H. White against G. Seals Aiken, it being a motion by White to have Aiken's name stricken as attorney for him in certain designated litigation in Fulton superior court. A rule nisi was issued, and a hearing had thereon. The exceptions were to certain rulings on objections to evidence on that hearing, and to the order of the judge granting the motion to have Mr. Aiken's name stricken. Portions of the record which respondent insists should have been made a part of the petition for certiorari consist of numerous pleadings in the original cause. They were not parts of the record in the case heard by the judge, and on which he rendered the decision which was excepted to. The motion to dismiss the certiorari is denied.
2. No statement of the facts need be made since the opinion of the Court of Appeals supplies these. Aiken v. White,
The authorities are overwhelming to the effect that a client has the absolute right to discharge the attorney and terminate the relation at any time, even without cause. 7 C. J. S. 940, § 109, and cit.; Weeks on Attorneys at Law (2d ed.), § 250; 1 Thornton on Attorneys at Law, § 138. It is insisted, however, that under our Code, § 9-613, and particularly under subsection 2 thereof, no such right exists. The section deals with lien of attorneys at law. Subsection 2 declares: "Upon suits, judgments, and decrees for money, attorneys at law shall have a lien superior to all liens but tax liens, and no person shall be at liberty to satisfy said suit, judgment, or decree until the lien or claim of the attorney for his fees is fully satisfied; and attorneys at law shall have the same right and power over said suits, judgments, and decrees, to enforce *33
their liens, as their clients had or may have for the amount due thereon to them." The Code of 1863, § 1987, declared the lien given by the common law to attorneys, and to others, is recognized by and may be enforced under the law of Georgia. Sections 1989 and 1990 of that Code were as follows: "The attorney's lien shall attach for his fees and for a general balance on all sums collected by him, and upon all property recovered by his services, and shall be superior to all other liens thereon. In claim cases the attorney causing the levy and prosecuting the rights of the plaintiff in fi. fa. shall be entitled to his fees from the proceeds of the property condemned, although older liens may demand and recover the proceeds from the immediate client of such attorney." "Parties cannot, by settlement between themselves, defeat the attorney of any lien or claim under contract with his client of which the opposite party had notice prior to the consummation of such settlement." Such was the law of Georgia until the act approved February 24, 1873 (Ga. L. 1873, p. 42), "to regulate the laws of liens in the State of Georgia." That act dealt with the liens not only of attorneys at law, but of many others. It introduced into our statute law the following contained in section 16 of the act, and which is now found in the latter portion of subsection 2 of section 9-613 of our present Code, to wit: "and attorneys at law shall have the same right and power over said suits, judgments, and decrees, to enforce their liens, as their clients had or may have for the amount due thereon to them." Lien laws are to be strictly construed, and one who claims a lien must bring himself clearly within the law. Seeman v. Schultze,
In most jurisdictions it has been held that even though the attorneys have a contingent fee, the client nevertheless has the right, with or without cause, to discharge his attorney, "unless the power of attorney is coupled with an interest in the cause of action." "Generally speaking, this interest must be in the thing itself; the power must be ingrafted on an estate in the thing, and the power and interest must be united in the same person. The interest must be such a beneficial interest in the power itself that if the power were revoked, the attorney would be deprived of a substantial right." 5 Am. Jur. 281, § 36. The same text continues: "Thus, while an attorney employed on a contingent fee may be vested with such interest in the cause of action as will entitle him to intervene in the action to protect it after he has been dismissed without cause, he has no such interest as will prevent the client from discharging him." In this State, however, the rule is well settled that where the attorney has a contingent fee, he has certain rights in the conduct of the litigation which may not be taken from him by the client. Coleman v. Ryan,
For decisions recognizing the right of a client to discharge his attorney at any time for any reason which seems satisfactory to him, however arbitrary, but nevertheless holding that when a client discharges the attorney, if the latter be not at fault, the severance of the relationship must be or should be made on conditions which are fair to the attorney, see Matter of Dunn,
The decision of the Court of Appeals is reversed, with direction. The judgment of the trial court should be affirmed, with the following direction: When the remittitur is received, before the trial court makes the judgment of this court its judgment, the trial court shall determine whether Mr. Aiken has already received reasonable compensation for the services rendered to his client; and if so, that the judgment striking his name from the case as attorney be affirmed. If it should be determined that the amount of fees already paid him is not sufficient in amount to be a reasonable compensation for the services rendered by him to the client at the time of his discharge, then the trial court will pass such order as will make Aiken secure for such balance. If in the opinion of the trial judge it be necessary to effectuate this latter purpose, a condition may be placed upon the order striking Aiken's name from the case.
Whether, had the attorney been employed with the fraudulent purpose of entrapping or disqualifying the attorney and in furtherance of such fraudulent purpose, or for the purpose of injuring him financially or otherwise, the court should add some further or different condition as to remuneration as a condition to having his name stricken from the case, is a question not made by this record. Nor are we here dealing with a situation where a definite sum had been agreed upon as a fee. *37
In addition to the authorities indicated above, see, on the question involved and related issues, the annotations in 7 A.L.R. 938, 16 A.L.R. 1159, and 124 A.L.R. 719; Todd v.
Superior Court,
Judgment reversed, with direction. All the Justices concur.