WURTZINGER, Administratrix, Respondent, v. JACOBS, d/b/a OTTO JACOBS TEAMING COMPANY, and another, Appellants.
Supreme Court of Wisconsin
January 10—February 8, 1967.
33 Wis. 2d 703
We conclude that the administration of justice would be best served by having the trial court conduct such factual hearing on the motion to vacate sentence. Therefore, the order denying the motion to vacate sentence should be reversed and the cause remanded for the purpose of conducting a factual hearing on the issue of denial of counsel and the probable subsidiary issue of whether there was an intelligent, voluntary and understanding waiver of counsel by defendant.
By the Court.—The judgment is affirmed; the order is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
WURTZINGER, Administratrix, Respondent, v. JACOBS, d/b/a OTTO JACOBS TEAMING COMPANY, and another, Appellants.
January 10—February 8, 1967.
For the respondent there was a brief by Godfrey, Godfrey, Neshek & Conway and Milton E. Neshek, all of Elkhorn, and oral argument by Milton E. Neshek.
WILKIE, J. Two issues are presented on this appeal:
1. Should the recovery made by the parents in the wrongful-death action be subject to the contribution rights of the defendants created by the negligence of the deceased?
2. Should the recovery made in the survival action be reduced for attorney‘s fees, in order to allow compensation to counsel before the recovery is available for contribution?
Appellants’ obvious reason for attempting to extend their contribution rights to the wrongful-death recovery and the attorney‘s fees in the survival action is that the
Wrongful-Death Recovery.
The doctrine of contribution is an equitable doctrine founded upon principles of equity and natural justice and based on common liability.1 Contribution between joint tort-feasors arises when one joint tort-feasor pays more than his equitable share of the damages.2 The basic elements of recovery in an action for contribution are set out in Farmers Mut. Automobile Ins. Co. v. Milwaukee Automobile Ins. Co.3 as:
- Both parties must be joint negligent wrongdoers.
- They must have common liability because of such negligence.
- One such party must have borne an unequal proportion of the common burden.
The requirements of an action for contribution do not exist against the beneficiaries of a wrongful-death action. None of the beneficiaries in the case at bar were guilty of any negligence which contributed to the causation of the accident. Thus, these beneficiaries were not joint negligent wrongdoers and there is no common liability on their part necessary to support a contribution against them. Furthermore, an action for wrongful death under
The wrongful-death action does not belong to the deceased and the proceeds of the action should not be subject to his obligations. The rule is stated as follows:7
“Where the personal representative . . . sues as a trustee on behalf of the particular persons designated in the statute, the damages are ordinarily not considered to be assets of the estate and therefore are not, generally, subject to the claims of the decedent‘s creditors.”
Under our statute, the trustee in bankruptcy of the deceased or other creditors of the deceased could not reach the wrongful-death proceeds. No good reason exists for making an exception for a creditor whose rights are based on a contribution action.
Appellants argue that contribution rights against the wrongful-death proceeds should exist because any negligence of the deceased is a limitation on the recovery of the statutory beneficiaries. The contributory negligence of the deceased as a limitation to recovery has been imposed by statute, however, and no mention is made of contribution rights in the statute. Our court has rejected an integral relation between contribution and contributory negligence in Bielski v. Schulze.8
Attorney‘s Lien.
The second cause of action for damages to the deceased‘s car and medical expense is a survival action under
The law of attorney‘s liens is summarized in the case of Stanley v. Bouck.9 When an action “is founded upon a written instrument in the possession of the attorney, he has a lien on the cause of action for his services and disbursements at least from the time of the commencement of the action . . . and after judgment he has a lien on the judgment obtained.”10 There was no such written instrument here. When an action is brought to recover unliquidated damages, either in contract or tort, there was, at common law, no lien before judgment.11 Such a lien was provided by statute, however, if the lien was given by contract between the attorney and his client and if notice of the agreement is made to the opposite party or his attorney.12 This statutory attorney‘s lien is
In the case at bar the only evidence of an agreement is in an uncontroverted affidavit of one of respondent‘s attorneys attached to their after-verdict motions. There is no record of any notice. Failing adequate facts as to the agreement and notice thereof, the trial court was in error in stating that there was an attorney‘s lien under
Although the record does not contain facts sufficient for a finding of a statutory lien, the rule is well established that an attorney has an equitable lien once a judgment in contract or tort action is recovered, this lien being by operation of law, for his services and disbursements in the action.14 This equitable lien is a distinct entity from the statutory lien provided by
“A distinction is sometimes made between setoffs acquired prior to, and those acquired after, the rendition of the judgment on which the attorney claims a lien. Thus, the attorney‘s lien is deemed superior to a setoff acquired after the rendition of the judgment, especially if the cause of action out of which the judgment sought to be set off resulted arose out of a transaction separate and distinct from that out of which arose the cause of action resulting in the judgment to which the attorney‘s lien is affixed, but inferior to a setoff acquired prior to
such judgment or to one that was properly pleaded and proved in the action.”15
Wisconsin has adopted this distinction. Thus, an attorney‘s equitable lien is superior to the setoff rights of judgment creditors when such creditors obtain judgment in an unrelated action,16 or when such creditors obtain judgments after the judgment in the action in which the attorney renders his service.17 On the other hand, the right of setoff, when the judgments are in the same action, or actions growing out of the same subject matter, is generally deemed superior to the claim of an attorney for compensation.18
Because the equitable lien in this instance is junior to the claims of defendant and because the record is insufficient to establish a statutory lien we remand for further proceedings to ascertain whether or not there was a lien under
By the Court.—Judgment affirmed as to Graf and Serio causes of action; judgment affirmed as to cause of action of Helen Wurtzinger and Frank Bart Wenzig, Sr.; judgment reversed as to cause of action of Mrs. Wurtzinger as administratrix of the estate of Frank Bart Wenzig, III, and remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. No costs on this appeal.
The three cases cited in the majority opinion for the proposition that “the right of setoff, when the judgments are in the same action, or actions growing out of the same subject matter, is generally deemed superior to the claim of an attorney for compensation” did not involve judgments for contribution and are not authority for such application. In Yorton v. Milwaukee, Lake Shore & W. R. Co. (1885), 62 Wis. 367, 21 N. W. 516, 23 N. W. 401, a setoff of a legal claim was allowed which consisted of setting off costs in favor of one against the costs in favor of the other party. The court put this result on the facts of the case upon equitable grounds. In Bosworth v. Tallman (1886), 66 Wis. 533, 29 N. W. 542, costs of one party to the action were set off against costs of the other party and the attorney‘s lien on the costs was subrogated. This decision, likewise, placed the result upon the equities between the parties. Rayworth v. Goodrick (1916), 163 Wis. 404, 158 N. W. 57, likewise did not involve a balancing of the attorney‘s lien with an equitable claim but a setoff of legal claims between the same parties.
In the instant case, it was the work and the services of the attorney which produced the judgment which is
I am authorized to state that Mr. Justice BEILFUSS joins in this dissent.
