Backus v. Byron

4 Mich. 535
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 4 Mich. 535 (Backus v. Byron) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Backus v. Byron, 4 Mich. 535 (Mich. 1857).

Opinion

By the Court,

Green, J.

On the trial of this cause before the Court without a jury, it was insisted on the part of the defendant, that this agreement was void on the ground of champerty, and that the plaintiff'was not entitled to recover thereon. The Court held that the argreement was not void, and rendered a judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant, for damages and costs, whereupon the defendant excepted to the ruling of the Court.

The case shows that there was some apparently conflicting testimony upon the trial, in regard to the terms of the contract in question, and it is assumed on'the part of the plaintiff, that the weight of the testimony shows an agreement essentially different from that found by the Court; an agreement wherein the property sought to be recovered was referred to merely as a measure of the compensation for the' plaintiff’s services, and not as forming the compensation itself. Without expressing any opinion whether, in a case made after judgment for the purpose of review, this Court will undertake to weigh conflicting testimony, it is sufficient to remark here, that the finding of this Court was in accordance with the testimony of the only witness who pretended to have heard the agreement made between the parties, and also that we must presume (the pleadings not being before us) that it was in accordance with the special contract or agreement under which the plaintiff sought to recover.

[538]*538The grave question is then presented, to this Court, for the first time during its existence, whether such an agreement between an attorney and his client can be upheld and enforced by the law of the land, or whether it is void on the ground of champerty.

That champerty was regarded as malum in se, and an offence of a high grade at the common law, which rendered void all contracts tainted with it, cannot be questioned: Barratry and maintenance (of which latter champerty was regarded as the most odious species) were offences of a kindred character, tending to strife, oppression and injustice, and the perpetrators thereof were visited, with grievous punishments. (Hawkins P. C., Ch. 84; Coke's Inst., 368, b; 4 Bl.. Com., 134; 2 Chitty's C. L., 234, note a; 4 K. Com., 6 ed., 449, note a.) Oar attention will first be directed to the inquiiy, what constitutes champerty at the commen law. Hawkins defines it to be : “ The unlawful maintenance of a suit in consideration of an agreement to have part of the thing in dispute, or some profit out of it.” (Hawhins P. C., ch. 84,§ 1.) Lord Coke says,it is “to maintain to have part of the land, or part of the debt, or other thing in plea or suit.” (Co. Lit., 368, &.) Chilly defines it to be “a bargain to divide the land (eampum partiré) or other subject in dispute, on condition of his carrying it on at his own expense and this is the definition given by Sir 'Wm. Blackstone. (2 Chitty’s Cr. L., 234, note a; 4 Pol. Com., 135.) Sir Wm. Grant, in 15 Yesey, 139, says : .Champerty “is the unlawful maintenance of a suit in consideration of a bargain for a part of the thing, or some profit out of itand this definition is quoted by Tindall, Ch. J., in Stanley vs. Jones (7 Bing., 369.)

Mr. Bouvier, in his Institutes of American Law, vol. 4, p. 236, says : “ By champerty is meant a bargain with a plaintiff or defendant, eampum partiré, to divide the land or other thing sued for between them if they prevail at law, the ehampertor agreeing to carry on the suit at his own expense. [539]*539It differs from maintenance in this, that in the latter the person assisting the suitor receives no part of the benefit, while in the former he receives one half, or other proportion of the thing sued for and Mr. Taylor, in his Law Glossary, defines it to be the purchasing of a right, or pretended right, under a condition that part, when obtained by suit, shall belong to the purchaser.

Although there is considerable diversity in the language used by these and other authors in describing this offence, yet I think, that upon examination it will appear that they all agree in substance. When it is considered that champerty is a species of maintenance, -it is cl'ear that all these definitions import, that the party bargaining for an interest in the thing in dispute, undertakes to aid in the prosecution of the suit for its recovery, and whether such aid is furnished in money by a layman, who pays the expenses of the suit, or by an attorney, or solicitor, in services rendered in its prosecutions it is the same, and each alike in effect, and in contemplation of law, is a maintainer of the suit, and prosecutes it, in whole or in part, at his own expense. -The consideration paid in the latter case would be equally as valuable as in the former, and the inducement to prosecute a doubtful or unconscionable claim would be the same, and the evil, if any, the same. It is equally champerty whether the contract be for one half, one quarter, or one eighth of the thing in dispute; and it would be strange indeed if the validity or invalidity of a contract of this character were made to depend upon the amount of the consideration to be paid, or in other words, upon the payment of a pari or the whole of the expenses of the suit. If the act were only malumprohibitum, the statute defining the offence and declaring its consequences, would require a strict construction according to a familiar rule, that when an act constitutes an offence at the common law, verbal criticisms upon the language used by authors in defining it, [540]*540not based upon some substantial ground of reason, are entitled to but little notice.

That venerable code of rules of human conduct, which has been eulogized by its sages as the perfection of human reason, would no longer be entitled to the respect-of learned jurists for its wisdom, if its mandates could be so easily evaded, and its ends be thus defeated. If payment by the suitor of some small portion of the expenses of the prosecution would render the contract lawful, all the evils which have been supposed to result from maintenance and champerty would flow unrestrained, while their perpetrators would be held justified, and receive the benefits of their pernicious acts uncensured ; for no attorney, when contracting for part of the thing in dispute, would ever fail thus to provide for the promotion of his interests, when impunity could be purchased at so cheap a rate. However, it may sometimes happen with statutes which are framed and enacted amidst the hurry and confusion of modern legislation in this country, the common law is not so lame and impotent in its provisions, and there is no reported case in England or this country wherein such a doctrine has been held.

Champerty, as, thus defined, being an offence at the common law, is it recognized as such by the laws of this State ? Section 22, of Chapter 161, of the Revised Statutes (jp. 189), provides, that every person who shall commit any indictable offence at the common law, for the punishment of which no provision is expressly made by any statute of this State, shall be punished by imprisonment in the County jail not more than two years, or by fine not exceeding two thousand 'dollars, or both, in the discretion of the Court.” This provision is very general in its terms, and fully recognizes, as in force, the rules of the common law, which ascertain and define what acts constitute offences.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Mich. 535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/backus-v-byron-mich-1857.