Brauer v. Lawrence

165 A.D. 8, 150 N.Y.S. 497, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8534
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 11, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 165 A.D. 8 (Brauer v. Lawrence) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brauer v. Lawrence, 165 A.D. 8, 150 N.Y.S. 497, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8534 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Laughlin, J.:

The action is on an assigned claim of Messrs. Kellogg & Rose, attorneys and counselors, on accounts stated for professional services.

The counterclaim is for the cancellation of the accounts stated. No argument has been presented in support of the appeal from the order denying a trial of the issues arising on the counterclaim before the trial of the issues arising on the complaint and answer. Manifestly, there is no merit in that appeal, for the facts relied upon in support of the counterclaim were available as a defense and no other relief was required. That order should, therefore, be affirmed.

The name of the defendant formerly was Curtiss, but it was changed by her marriage to Lawrence. By a decree of the Probate Court of the district of Fairfield, Conn., the defendant was duly adjudged to be incompetent by reason of intemperance and mental derangement ” and “ incapable of managing her affairs ” on the 17th day of August, 1907, and conservators of her person and property were duly appointed there. They remained the lawful custodians of her person and property until the 17th of June, 1912, when they were duly discharged by a decree of said court, and her property was restored to her. On the 7th of October, 1907, on due application by the Connecticut conservators, the Supreme Court of this State at Special Term duly appointed them a committee of her property here, the order being based on the Connecticut decree, and on the 6th of July, 1912, the conservators, after their discharge in Connecticut, were duly discharged here and her property within this jurisdiction was thereupon restored to her. An application in behalf of the defendant made by the assignors to vacate the order appointing the Connecticut conservators a committee of her property was granted at Special Term, but reversed by this court on the ground that she was a resident of Connecticut, and that the court in that State acquired jurisdiction, and its decree was conclusive and entitled to full faith and credit as if made here; and our decision was [10]*10affirmed by the Court of Appeals. (Matter of Curtiss, 134 App. Div. 547; 197 N. Y. 583.) The assignors thereafter in her behalf, alleging her competency, applied for a commission de lunático inquirendo here and prayed for an order superseding the order of the Supreme Court appointing a committee and discharging the committee and restoring her property to her. An order was made at Special Term directing that a commission issue to inquire into her competency; but on appeal to this court by the conservators it was reversed on the ground that the application should have been made in Connecticut, and that the Connecticut decree remained conclusive here as to her incompetency, while it stood unaffected there, so long as she remained a resident of that State; and our decision was affirmed on the same ground. (Matter of Curtiss, 137 App. Div. 584; 199 N. Y. 36.)

The plaintiff pleads three accounts stated and has recovered on all. The third is for $436.66 for services rendered after the discharge of her conservators, and it is conceded that plaintiff was entitled to recover on that. The other two were and are contested. The employment and rendition of the services and the advancement of moneys, for which the first account is claimed to have been stated, were all during the period from June 29, 1909, to April 17, 1912, after defendant had been adjudged to be incompetent and,while she remained subject to the adjudication. The first account stated is alleged to have been stated on April 25, 1912, while defendant was still incompetent, according to the decree, and to have been again stated on July 26, 1912, after her disability had been removed. On the 18th of April, 1912, the attorneys presented to defendant in the presence of her husband a bill for $35,000 for services to April seventeenth, and for $1,791.40 for disbursements, and for $5,551.99 for cash advanced, aggregating $42,343.39, with a credit of $2,650, of which $2,500 was received as an allowance by the court in one or both of said proceedings instituted by them in New York. On the twenty-fifth of April the defendant and her husband had an interview with one of the attorneys. According to the testimony of the attorney he asked if they were satisfied with the bill, and “they said that they would like to have it less, but if I [11]*11thought it was all right, they would let it go,” and thereupon he prepared a letter to himself approving the bill, showing a balance owing of $39,693.39, and defendant .signed it. The husband of the defendant suggested the final sentence of the letter, which is as follows: “This letter is written and signed by me on the understanding that these amounts for fees and services shall not be collected or insisted upon at once on the restoration of my property but from time to time out of my property and income so as not to inconvenience me or to jeopardize my property.” On the 26th day of July, 1912, defendant, at the request of the attorneys and without any new consideration, signed the following indorsement on the bill: “ The above account is hereby settled at $39,693.39 having heretofore approved by me.” If this were a case for an account stated, the conditions with respect to the terms of payment agreed upon when the account was first stated attached to the second statement of it, and as there was no evidence showing the existence of the facts essential, under the first approval, to render it due, the recovery was not warranted. It is essential, however, to the validity of an account stated, that there be a valid indebtedness (Bauer v. Ambs, 144 App. Div. 274), and we think there was none here for the reason that the defendant is conclusively presumed to have been incapable of contracting, and her contract of employment of the attorneys was, therefore, void. (Carter v. Beckwith, 128 N. Y. 312.) Some of the services, disbursements and advances — it does not appear what part — were rendered and expended in endeavoring to procure the discharge of the conservators and of the committee. The court in those proceedings, if satisfied that the proceedings were instituted and the services rendered in good faith and that there was some apparent reasonable ground therefor, might have made an allowance Carter v. Beckwith, supra, and Matter of Larner, 170 N. Y. 7); and if the proceedings have terminated without any allowance and without a decision as to whether an allowance should be made, it may be, since the court. in those proceedings has now lost jurisdiction over the property, as in Carter v. Beckwith (supra), that there is a claim for the reasonable value of the services enforcible by action, but that question has not [12]*12been fully argued, and we do not deem it necessary to decide it now. Nor can the recovery be sustained on the theory of an account stated with respect to a moral or equitable claim. The defendant pleaded, and offered to show, an agreement in advance for the rendition of all the services rendered in procuring the discharge of the conservators and of the committee for $7,500, and the delivery of a note therefor later on, but on plaintiff’s objection the evidence was excluded and a broad ruling was made to the effect that the account stated was controlling and could be impeached only for fraud or mistake, which the court ruled was not alleged, and denied a motion to amend by alleging them, and the defendant was given an exception thereto.

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Bluebook (online)
165 A.D. 8, 150 N.Y.S. 497, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brauer-v-lawrence-nyappdiv-1914.