Chapman, Lyon & Noyes v. Cowles

91 Am. Dec. 508, 41 Ala. 103
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 91 Am. Dec. 508 (Chapman, Lyon & Noyes v. Cowles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chapman, Lyon & Noyes v. Cowles, 91 Am. Dec. 508, 41 Ala. 103 (Ala. 1867).

Opinion

BYKD, J.

The appellants recovered a judgment against the appellee, in 1861. On the 25th of March of the same year, an execution issued on the judgment, and was placed in the hands of the sheriff, who made' a return, dated August 29th, 1861, that, “ plaintiff being an alien enemy, principal not collected, costs paid by defendant”; and on the 3d March, 1863, the sheriff endorsed on the execution, “ This execution is satisfied,” and signed his name thereto. [106]*106It does not appear that any other execution was ever issued on the judgment. On the 16th March, 1863, the sheriff paid the currency collected on the judgment to Messrs. Martin, Baldwin & Sayre, the attorneys of record of appellants, and took a receipt from them, “ in full of plaintiffs’ demand.” It is apparent from the record, that the sheriff had no other execution in his hands than the one issued in March, 1861. He therefore had no authority to receive the money in 1863, so far as the record showsand his endorsement on the execution, issued in 1861, of satisfaction, could not, and does not, bind his sureties on his official bond. Bobo et al. v. Thompson et al., 3 Stew. & P. 385 ; Barton v. Lockhart, 2 Stew. & P. 109; 13 Ala. 526.

But the collection of a judgment by a sheriff, who has no authority to collect, and a subsequent payment of the money to the attorneys of the plaintiff of record, and the receipt thereof by them, in satisfaction of the demand, would, in law, be a discharge or satisfaction of the judgment.—Dubberly v. Black’s Adm’r, 38 Ala. 193. But, to make a payment valid and a satisfaction of the judgment, in such a case, the money paid to the attorneys must be lawful money, or such as the law recognizes as a satisfaction.

[2,] The question in this case is, whether a creditor is precluded from proceeding against his debtor'for payment of a debt or judgment, after the debtor has paid the attorney of the creditor depreciated paper money which is current, in satisfaction of the debt or judgment. We propose to notice some of the decisions bearing on this question, and the general authority of an attorney, and to deduce some principles therefrom which will be decisive of this case.

The case of Jones et al. v. Ransom, (3 Ind. 327,) was a proceeding to revive a judgment; the defendants relied on a compromise made with the attorneys of the plaintiff, and a ratification thereof by him, as a defense to the proceeding. The court held, that “the plaintiff was not bound by the compromise at the time it was made; the attorneys-at-law having no authority to make it.” The case was reversed, on the question of a ratification by the plaintiff of the compromise. The case of Abbe et al. v. Roads, (6 Mc[107]*107Lean, 107,) is, in principle, tbe same as tbe case of Jones v. Ransom, supra.

The case of Jewett et al. v. Wardleigh, (32 Maine, 110,) bolds, that “an attorney-at-law has no authority, in virtue of his general employment, to discharge an execution in favor of bis client, unless upon payment of its whole amount.” To the same effect, see the case of Jenney v. Delesdernier, 20 Maine, 183. An attorney of record in a judgment bas no authority to accept a deed of trust for bis client.—Doub v. Barnes, 4 Gill’s R. 1.

In the case of H. & G. Vail v. Conant, (15 Vermont, 314,) it is held, tbat tbe power of an attorney is confined to the prosecution of a suit, and the incidents properly connected therewith, and does not extend to the compromising and discharging of the client’s cause of action, without receiving bis full claim.

The case of Lewis, adm'x, v. Gamage, (1 Pick. 317,) was an action against the original debtor, by a creditor, whose attorney received one hundred dollars on a judgment for seventy dollars damages and fifty-five 6-100 dollars cost, in full of the same, and made the following endorsement on the execution: “ January 2, 1821. Received one hundred dollars in full discharge of this execution”; and the court held, that “the creditor may, perhaps, maintain an action against the attorney for making such a compromise, but this does not affect the debtor; be is not injured by being compelled to pay the whole debt.”

In the case of Smock v. Dade, (5 Rand. 639,) which was a motion to quash an execution, on tbe ground tbat tbe debtor bad paid tbe judgment to tbe attorney of plaintiff, in money and a bond on a third person, tbe court held, tbat “ an attorney-at-law bas no right to receive a bond from a debtor, in discharge of bis client’s claim, without tbe assent of tbe client. If he does, be is tbe agent, not of tbe plaintiff, but of tbe defendant, and the plaintiff may still proceed against tbe defendant.”

In the case of Jackson v. Bartlett, (8 John. 285,) it is held, that an attorney has no “ authority, from bis general character, to discharge the defendant from execution on ca. sa., until the money was paid.”

[108]*108In the case of Baldwin et al. v. Merrill, (8 Humph. 132,) the court say: “The attorney of the plaintiffs has no authority, as such, to receive a note, or any thing but money, in satisfaction of the judgment.”

The case of Commissioners, &c., v. Rose, (1 Dess. Eq. 464,) was a suit against the debtor, who had paid the attorney of the creditor, in a currency different from that stipulated in the contract, and less valuable, and the attorney surrendered up the contract to the debtor; and the court held the debtor liable, saying: “The defendant Tunnohaving acted contrary to the trust or confidence reposed in him, the defendant Eose must seek redress against him, for whatever damages he may sustain. And as on the one hand, the State would have been bound by the defendant Moultrie’s act, if he had actually received the specie or indents for Bose’s debt; so on the other hand, as he has not received the specie or indents, Eose shall not be released from payment, although his bond has been cancelled. Creditors would be placed in a perilous situation, indeed, if, by the combination of an attorney with the debtor or his agent, a receipt, without payment of the money, should be deemed sufficiently valid to discharge the debtor from his obligation.”

In Fitch v. Scott, (8 How. Miss. R. 314,) the court held, that “an attorney has no aulhority to compromise the claim of his client; and if he does so, he takes upon himself the consequences of its loss, or the damages which he may sustain.”

In Clark & Co. v. Kingsland, (1 Sm. & Mar. 248,) the court say: “It is the business of an attorney to collect the money on claims placed in his hands for collection, and his authority as an attorney extends no further.” It seems that the attorney of the plaintiff had received, in part payment of a judgment, an assignment of another judgment, and gave a receipt in payment and discharge, pro tanto, to the debtor, who, having paid the balance of the judgment, moved the court for an entry of satisfaction. The court farther say: “Any receipt, given by an attorney for sack security, although it profess to be in satisfaction or payment, is not binding on his client, nor is it a legal discharge [109]*109of so much of the debt.

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Bluebook (online)
91 Am. Dec. 508, 41 Ala. 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chapman-lyon-noyes-v-cowles-ala-1867.