Babin v. Royal Indemnity Co.

28 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 148, 1930 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1211
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedJune 16, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 28 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 148 (Babin v. Royal Indemnity Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Babin v. Royal Indemnity Co., 28 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 148, 1930 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1211 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1930).

Opinion

Kramer, J.

This matter is before the court on motion of plaintiff’s counsel, Thompson, Hine & Flory asking that the court declare it to have a lien against the judgment rendered in this action for the amount due counsel for services rendered in this cause.

In the original action plaintiff recovered a judgment against Royal Indemnity Company by the consideration of this court for the sum of two thousand two hundred eighty dollars, plus interest and costs. To the judgment of this .court defendant filed its petition in error in the Court of Appeals and plaintiff filed a cross-petition in error. The judgment of this court was subsequently affirmed by the Court of Appeals. After the affirmance of the judgment, counsel for plaintiff notified defendant that it claimed a lien on the judgment to the extent of five hundred dollars due it for services rendered in obtaining the judgment and shortly thereafter filed the motion which is now before the court, asking that it be declared to have a lien on the judgment to the extent of five hundred dol[149]*149lars and that this lien be certified on the docket of the cause.

It appears that after the judgment was originally rendered by this court certain causes of action accrued in favor of defendant Royal Indemnity Company against plaintiff Jacob Babin and that defendant subsequently recovered several judgments against plaintiff, the aggregate amount of which judgments exceeded the amount of plaintiff’s judgment herein against defendant. After having been notified that counsel for plaintiff claimed a lien against the judment rendered herein, and after the filing of the motion of plaintiff’s counsel, plaintiff executed and delivered to defendant a separate satisfaction of the judgment in. the within case and defendant caused the same to be copied upon the docket. Whether any actual payment was made by defendant to plaintiff does not appear, but probably the satisfaction was given to effect a partial set-off. Whether or not any payment was actually made is unimportant.

There is no claim made that plaintiff’s attorneys had a contingent fee contract with plaintiff or that there was any express agreement for their fees. Plaintiff’s attorneys seek to recover on the basis of quantum meruit. It is conceded by defendant that the amount sought by plaintiff’s counsel is a reasonable charge for the services rendered by them in the prosecution of the within case.

The motion of counsel asking that they be declared to have a lien on the judgment to the extent of its charge for services rendered in this particular case raises a question of which there was formerly some doubt, due probably to some dieta in the case of Diehl v. Friester, 37 O. S., 473, where the court said at page 477:

“Although an attorney may contribute his skill and service in obtaining a judgment for his client, he has, in this state, no lien on such judgment for his fees, .where there is no agreement for such lien known to the judgment debtor, in the sense that such judgment debtor may not effectually satisfy such judgment by payment of the amount thereof to the judgment creditor; nor do we doubt the right of parties to compromise any pending suit, in [150]*150opposition to the wish of their attorneys. But, on the other hand, an attorney may have a claim upon the fruits of a judgment or decree which he has assisted in obtaining, or upon a sum of money which he has collected, and under some circumstances courts will aid him m securing or maintaining such claim. Thus he will be protected in retaining his fee out of money which he has collected for his client. Longworth v. Handy, 2 Handy, 75. He will be protected in his .claim as attorney on a fund in the hands of a receiver (Olds v. Tucker, 35 Ohio St., 581), or in court. Ingham v. Lindemann, ante, 218. This protection, it will be seen from the cases cited, will be afforded in many other cases. And why should not Hunter & Mallory be protected to the same extent as if Diehl had paid the money into court? The motion for set-off was, as we have seen, an appeal to the equitable power of the court, and where such appeal is made, the court looks not merely to the form the transaction is made to assume, but to its substance. The attorneys contributed, undoubtedly, in obtaining the judgment.”

Notwithstanding the fact that the court says that an attorney has no lien on such judgment for his fees, the claim of the attorneys for fees was protected and the motion for set-off was denied, thus in effect giving to the attorneys a lien on the judgment, or at least a right against the judgment, and the court refused to allow the defendant to set off its judgment against plaintiff against the judgment rendered in favor of plaintiff against defendant to the prejudice of the claim of the attorneys for fees. Syllabus 2 of the case is as follows-:

“A motion that one judgment be set-off against another is an appeal to the equitable power of the court, to be granted or refused upon consideration of all the facts; and in granting such motion, the claim of the attorneys for fees will be respected, whenever it appears to be right, in view of the facts, that this should be done.”

In this case the court points out that the record does not show whether or not there was any agreement between Friester and his attorneys as to the amount of the fee and its lien and the holding above is made regardless of this fact.

The apparent confusion arising out of the dicta in Diehl [151]*151v. Friester was dissolved by later cases. In the case of Walcutt v. Huling, 5 Ohio App., 326 (affirming Huling v. Columbus, 13 O. N. P. (N. S.), 409), affirmed without opinion in 92 O. S., 518, the court said at page 330:

“The decisions of our Supreme Court do not in words hold that an attorney has a lien upon a judgment which was secured through his efforts, but we are unable to reconcile certain decisions of our Supreme Court except upon the theory that that court recognizes the existence of such a lien.”

The court also quoted with approval from Hanna v. Island Coal Company, 51 Am. St. Rep., 257 and 258, as follows:

“ ‘Besides the general or retaining lien which an attorney has upon papers, books, documents, money and other property in his possession, to secure his professional compensation he has what is called, for want of a better name, a particular or charging lien upon a judgment procured by him for his client. This right to recover for his services in obtaining a judgment for his client is called a lien, in the broad sense of the term, although it does not depend upon possession, but rests merely on the equity of the attorney to be paid his fees and disbursements out of the judgment which he has obtained. It is considered reasonable and proper that an attorney, by whose labor and at whose expense a judgment has been obtained for his client, should have an interest in that judgment which the law will regard and protect. An eminent judge once said:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 148, 1930 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/babin-v-royal-indemnity-co-ohctcomplcuyaho-1930.