Baskin v. Pass

302 Mass. 338
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 4, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 302 Mass. 338 (Baskin v. Pass) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baskin v. Pass, 302 Mass. 338 (Mass. 1939).

Opinion

Cox, J.

This is a bill in equity to reach and apply money alleged to be due the principal defendant, Pass, hereinafter referred to as Pass, from Freed-Malins Electric Company, Incorporated, Charles Freed, and Samuel Malins, the amount of which was alleged to be in litigation in a suit in equity brought by Pass against the last named defendants. Pass alleged in his answer, among other things, that he had been and would be subject to great expense in prosecuting his claim against Freed and the others; that he owed his attorneys a large sum of money for legal services and other expenses; and he asked that all legal and other expenses that he might be put to in prosecuting his claim against Freed and the others be ascertained and ordered to be paid to his attorneys before the plaintiff should be [339]*339allowed to reach and apply any funds that might be found due and payable by Freed and the others to him.

The case was referred to a master who reported that Pass was indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $2,036.27 with interest at ten per cent per annum from January 14, 1933. This finding, however, is not borne out by the subsidiary facts found by the master and will be dealt with later on.

After the master’s report had been filed, Robert H. O. Schulz and Mordacai Shore were permitted by the trial judge to file a petition to intervene. The petition alleged that they were employed by Pass, as attorneys, to represent him in the suit in equity brought against Freed and others; that they had been and were representing Pass; that he was indebted to them for their services in that case; that “said attorneys knew at the time of their employment that said Pass had no money and that they must look solely to the amount of money that could be recovered in said proceedings for their compensation”; that “said Pass promised and agreed as an inducement for said attorneys to represent him in said proceedings . . . that they were to collect from said Charles Freed et als the amount of the contemplated judgment that might be recovered and take therefrom any and all moneys due to them for their services as attorneys, paying the balance, if any, to said Pass”; and further that “said Pass offered to assign said judgment or execute a note secured by an assignment of said contemplated judgment.” They asked that the amount of their fees due them “from said Pass in his proceedings against Charles Freed et als be ascertained and determined and that said fees due to said Schulz and Shore be ordered paid to them before said Sarah Bascom [sic], the plaintiff in this action, be allowed to reach and apply any funds that may be recovered by said Pass in his action against said Charles Freed et als.” The master had already reported that Pass employed Schult (sic) and Shore to prosecute the claim against Freed and the others; that “Pass at that time was without funds and said attorneys necessarily must look to the proceeds of said litigation for payment of their services.” [340]*340He further stated: “I find they did so look to said proceeds and performed the services hereinafter set forth in the justified expectation that they would be paid out of said ■ funds.”

After the petition to intervene had been filed, the suit of Pass against Freed and the others was settled for $1,700 which, in accordance with an interlocutory decree in the case at bar, was deposited with the clerk of the Superior Court, and the present bill in equity, as against Freed, Malins, and Freed-Malins Electric Company, Incorporated, was dismissed. The case was again referred to the master to determine the amount of the value of the services of Schulz and Shore. The master reported that the services were reasonably worth $1,100.

The case then came on to be heard before a judge upon the question of a final decree, and “in connection therewith certain evidence was heard by . . . [him] as to the contract of the interveners . . . with . . . Pass.” The judge filed findings of fact and order for decree. He found that “the interveners were employed as attorneys for the plaintiff Pass in the case of Pass-y-Freed-Malins Electrical Co., Inc., under an agreement by which Pass was to furnish the ■necessary money to pay all expenses in connection with the prosecution of his claim and that his attorneys were to look solely [italics ours] to any proceeds of such suit for their compensation.” In accordance with the order for .decree, a final decree was entered establishing the debt of Pass to the plaintiff and ordering that out of the $1,700 deposited the clerk of court should pay to Schulz and Shore, “on their petition to intervene,” $1,100, and to the plaintiff, $600. The final decree adopted the findings of the master as to the amount due from Pass which is subject to the error hereinbefore referred to. The defendant Pass and the plaintiff appealed from the final decree.

The plaintiff has filed in this court a motion to dismiss the appeal of Pass, but this appeal is not before us. It does not appear to have been entered in this court by Pass, although the record discloses that he appealed from the final decree. ‘ ‘ The plaintiff alone — as the docket entries disclose [341]*341— has taken steps to bring the case here.” Styrnbrough v. Cambridge Savings Bank, 299 Mass. 22, 24.

The plaintiff contends that the petition to intervene was never allowed by the court, and there is nothing in the record or docket entries to show that it was. We think, however, that we should treat it as allowed in view of the proceedings in the trial court. The facts disclose that it was a case for intervention. Piper v. Childs, 290 Mass. 560, 563, 564.

Pass has filed no brief and, aside from the contention of the plaintiff that has just been disposed of, the arguments of the plaintiff and the interveners are whether the latter had a lien for their services on the proceeds of the suit against Freed and the others that had priority over the plaintiff’s claim. We do not think that it is necessary to consider this question, for if we assume that the interveners’ agreement with Pass was sufficient to create a lien, as they contend, nevertheless they are not entitled to benefit thereby for the reason that their agreement was champertous.

“As between an attorney at law and his client it is of the essence of champerty that the attorney, having no previous interest to justify him, upon recovery is to have as his own some part of the thing recovered, or some profit out of it. Thurston v. Percival, 1 Pick. 415. Lathrop v. Amherst Bank, 9 Met. 489. Lancy v. Havender, 146 Mass. 615. But an agreement that one not previously interested and who agrees to prosecute a suit, upon recovery shall have a share of the thing recovered is not for that reason alone champertous. The bargain to be illegal must have the further element that the attorney’s services shall not constitute a debt due him from the client, and that his prospective share is to be the only compensation which the attorney shall receive. If in effect he ‘ agreed to look for his compensation to that alone which might be recovered, and thus to make his pay depend upon his success’ the bargain is champertous and void. Ackert v. Barker, 131 Mass. 436, 438. ‘ Where the right to compensation is not confined to an interest .in the thing recovered, but gives a right of action against the party,’ the agreement is not champertous. [342]*342Blaisdell v. Ahern, 144 Mass. 393, 395. See Scott v. Harmon, 109 Mass.

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Bluebook (online)
302 Mass. 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baskin-v-pass-mass-1939.