Adkins v. Staker

198 N.E. 575, 130 Ohio St. 198, 130 Ohio St. (N.S.) 198, 4 Ohio Op. 148, 1935 Ohio LEXIS 222
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 20, 1935
Docket25326
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 198 N.E. 575 (Adkins v. Staker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adkins v. Staker, 198 N.E. 575, 130 Ohio St. 198, 130 Ohio St. (N.S.) 198, 4 Ohio Op. 148, 1935 Ohio LEXIS 222 (Ohio 1935).

Opinion

Jones, J.

While the plaintiff denied entering into the contingent contract set forth in the answer, in the disposition of this case we shall assume that he did so as found by the trial court. The precise legal question to be determined is whether, under our Workmen’s Compensation Law, such contracts are valid. “In England, in accordance with the common law rule, agreements between attorney and client for a fee contingent on the success of the litigation are held invalid on the ground of champerty.” 2 Ruling Case Law, 1039, Section 121. In this country, the weight of au *202 thority recognizes the validity of contracts for contingent fees; and they have been sustained in this state in several cases, the last being Roberts et al., Partners, v. Montgomery, 115 Ohio St., 502, 154 N. E., 740. However, neither that nor any other Ohio case considered the validity of contracts for fees under our Workmen’s Compensation Law; nor did they involve private contracts where awards were payable out of the State Insurance Fund, in which the state has a peculiar interest as trustee of the fund. Counsel for defendants in error concede that there are “no Ohio cases dealing with contingent fees in Workmen’s Compensation cases.” We are therefore called upon to pass upon the validity of such contracts and to decide whether they can be sustained under our Constitution and our existing laws.

The chief purpose of the provisions of our state Constitution relating to workmen’s compensation was to levy compulsory contributions upon employers for the purpose of providing compensation to workmen or their dependents. Section 35, Article II of our organic law declares that purpose and commits its enforcement to the legislative branch of the government. It .provides that laws may be passed establishing a state fund and administered by the state; that the Legislature may determine “the terms and conditions upon which payment shall be made therefrom.” Pursuant to this constitutional provision the Legislature passed various laws for the safeguarding of the State Insurance Fund, for the payment of the just claims of workmen injured in industry, and for payment of the claims of their dependents in case of such workmen’s death.

The terms of the contingent contract here under consideration authorize an equal division, between attorney and client, of the amount of any award thereafter made by the Industrial Commission. After obtaining a favorable judgment in the trial court, the claimant received an award in the sum of $1456. Of that *203 amount, Ms attorneys, under their contract, obtained the sum of $700, in addition to a fee of $195.60, which, at the instance' of the attorneys, the trial judge fixed under Section 1465-90, General Code. The award and fee were paid out of the State Insurance Fund.

Section 1465-90, General Code, reads as follows: ‘ ‘ The cost of any legal proceedings, authorized by tMs section, including an attorney’s fee to the claimant’s attorney to be fixed by the trial judge, shall be taxed against the unsuccessful party; provided, however, that such attorney fee shall not exceed twenty per cent of any award up to the sum of five hundred dollars, and ten per cent on all amounts in excess thereof, but in no event shall such fee exceed the sum of five hundred dollars.” Under the above quoted section the trial judge has discretion to fix the fee within the percentages named, basing the amount fixed upon the nature and character of services rendered by the attorneys; however, he is precluded in any case from fixing a fee exceeding the sum of $500. It is clear that any private contract which entails the payment of a greater fee than that specified by statute is invalid; for if claimant and attorney are permitted to fix fees it would nullify and render ineffectual that clause authorizing the trial judge to do tMs. The legislature has seen fit to lodge that power in a judicial officer, having in mind the constitutional mandate empowering it to determine “the terms and conditions upon which payment shall be made” from the fund. The trial court, by statute, has the sole power of fixing such fees. Industrial Commission v. Nelson, 127 Ohio St., 41, 186 N. E., 735. The statute prescribes that “in no event shall such fee exceed the sum of five hundred dollars”; yet under this particular contract the attorneys received as fees the sum of $895.60, when they were only entitled to the amount fixed by the court for their services. If the defendant attorneys relied upon their contract for fee remuneration, we *204 fail to comprehend why they applied to the trial judge for fees, thereby recognizing the judge’s authority to fix them in compliance with the provisions of Section 1465-90, General Code.

Many states have adopted statutes controlling fees paid in workmen’s compensation cases and, where it appears that fee contracts are controlled or inhibited by state law, they have been held to be unenforceable, and if money has been paid thereon by a claimant to an attorney, it may be recovered by the claimant. Sarja v. Pittsburgh Steel Co., 154 Minn., 217, 191 N. W., 742; Gritta’s (dependents’) Case, 241 Mass., 525, 135 N. E., 874. Laws fixing compensation in workmen’s compensation cases must be read into any private contract between claimant and counsel. In the instant case, the contingent contract contemplates payment of money out of the State Insurance Fund. The contributing employers and the state, both, have an interest in the collection and distribution of the fund, or, as expressed in the language of the constitution, in “the terms and conditions upon which payment shall be made therefrom.” The state is the trustee of the fund and is empowered to administer it. In a Michigan case, the principle applying is well stated in the third proposition of the syllabus as follows: “Compensation payable to injured employee under provisions of Workmen’s Compensation Act is not private matter between employer and employee, but public is interested; said act declaring state policy regarding personal injuries caused by industrial accidents.” Harrington v. Department of Labor, 252 Mich., 87, 233 N. W., 361.

Pursuant to its constitutional mandate, the Legislature adopted not only Section 1465-90 but adopted also Section 1465-111, General Code (114 Ohio Laws, 790), which reads: “The industrial commission shall have authority to inquire into the amounts of fees charged employers or claimants by attorneys, agents or rep *205 resentatives for services in matters before tbe industrial commission, to make rules concerning the payment of fees, to protect parties against unfair fees, and to fix the amount of fees in the event Of a controversy in respect thereto.” '

An overwhelming number of compensation cases never reach the courts but are settled by the final order of the commission awarding compensation from which no appeal can be taken; and undoubtedly this section applies to that class.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
198 N.E. 575, 130 Ohio St. 198, 130 Ohio St. (N.S.) 198, 4 Ohio Op. 148, 1935 Ohio LEXIS 222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adkins-v-staker-ohio-1935.