Citizen's Bank v. Oglesby

270 A.D. 136, 58 N.Y.S.2d 591
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 3, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 270 A.D. 136 (Citizen's Bank v. Oglesby) 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
Citizen's Bank v. Oglesby, 270 A.D. 136, 58 N.Y.S.2d 591 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

Close, P. J.

The factual background in this case is rather complex and confused and, I am sure, is sui generis in its nature. Consequently, only such facts as are necessary to pose the question involved will be stated.

The plaintiff brought an action in the Supreme Court, Westchester County, seeking a judgment declaring that a certain judgment recorded in the name of defendant Jay W. Cole was in truth and in fact owned by defendant Oglesby, who, in turn, was a judgment debtor of the plaintiff. The defendant David Wark Griffith intervened in that action, appearing by the respondent herein, and in his answer claimed that he was the owner of the judgment recorded in the name of Cole. Cole also appeared and answered. The respondent herein was subsequently substituted and continued in the action as attorney for Cole as well as Griffith. In that action, on plaintiff’s application, an order was made, in effect impounding the judgment and restraining its transfer or collection.

It appears that before the plaintiff began its litigation, a receiver in equity had been appointed in the Federal court to conserve and liquidate the assets of a corporation known as D. W. Griffith, Incorporated. The receiver brought a proceeding in the Federal court to set aside a certain judicial sale made in 1937. Both Oglesby and Griffith were concerned therein. In connection with that proceeding, the receiver secured an order in the Federal court restraining all parties from paying, collecting or transferring the judgment. In 1945 a settlement was arranged between the principals in the proceeding brought by the Federal receiver and the suit brought by plaintiff, pursuant to the terms of which the Cole judgment was to be assigned to the Federal receiver and the action brought by plaintiff was to be discontinued.

In the meantime Griffith and Cole notified the respondent that his services were terminated, whereupon the respondent brought a summary proceeding to have the value of his services and the amount of his disbursements fixed by the court. No one appeared in opposition and the court fixed the value of his services at $1,500 and the amount of his disbursements at $201.06, a total of $1,701.06.

When the plaintiff sought by motion to discontinue the action brought by it, the respondent opposed the motion. The motion was referred to an official referee to hear and determine. After such hearing the motion to discontinue was granted on condition that the Federal receiver, who was to re.ceive the assignment of the Cole judgment, pay to the respondent the amount [139]*139of his fees as fixed. The order also granted the receiver the right to intervene so that he might appeal from the order. This he has done and asks that the order be reversed. The other appellants seek the same relief.

The remedy which the respondent has thus far successfully pursued is a rather interesting development of the efforts put forth by courts and legislatures to thwart clients in their efforts unjustly to deprive attorneys of their just compensation.

The original estate of the legal fraternity in England, at least so far as counselors were concerned, was so elevated that they possessed no right to demand compensation for their services. “ A counsel can maintain no action for his fees; which are given, not as locatio vel conductio, but as quiddam honorarium; not as salary or hire, but as a mere gratuity, which a counsellor cannot demand without doing wrong to his reputation * * (Chase’s Blackstone [3d ed.], p. 630.) In that respect the legal fraternity was classified with the physicians, concerning whom Lord Kenyon said: “ It has always been understood in this country that the fees of a physician are honorary, and not demandable of right.” (Chorley v. Bolcot, 4 T. R. 317, 318.) However, we have it on the word of the learned Senator Verplanck in Adams v. Stevens & Cagger (26 Wend. 451, 465) that north of the River Tweed no such custom ever existed, the thrifty inhabitants of those moors and highlands having by statute provided that “ honoraries may be pursued ”.

The exact question involved in Adams v. Stevens & Cagger (supra) was whether counsel, who had been engaged to argue two cases in the Court of Errors, could recover the amount of compensation agreed upon for his services or whether he was limited by the terms of the “ fee-bill ”, so called (2 Rev. Stat. of N. Y. [2d ed.], part III, ch. X, tit. HI), to a fee of $3.75 in each case. The court, in separate opinions written by the learned Chancellor Walwobth, Senator Lee and Senator Vebplanck, reached the unanimous conclusion that the doctrine that counsel fees are merely an honorarium dependent upon the client’s generosity was “ not consistent with our utilitarian policy and practical notions ” (p. 461), and affirmed a judgment in favor of plaintiffs. The court, however, was careful to limit the right of recovery to a cause of action based upon an express contract and expressed no opinion as to whether an action on an implied contract would lie.

Before the Code of Procedure was adopted in 1848, an attorney had a lien upon the judgment for his services, but the [140]*140legal measure of those services was the taxable costs, and so it always happened that the extent of the attorney’s lien was equal to the costs recovered in the action. (Rooney v. Second Avenue Railroad Co., 18 N. Y. 368.) In the Code of Procedure all restrictions on the right of a party to agree with an attorney for his compensation were repealed and the measure of an attorney’s compensation was left to the agreement, express or implied, of the parties. (L. 1848, ch. 379, § 258.) But the attorney still had no lien for the full agreed amount of his services. At most he had a lien for his costs on the judgment that had been recovered. (Coughlin v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co., 71 N. Y. 443, 449.) A lien for the attorney’s services was first enforced because of the enactment of section 303 of the Code of Procedure in 1849. (L. 1849, ch. 438.) Thereafter he was allowed a lien after judgment for any compensation that his client had agreed to pay him. (Wright v. Wright, 70 N. Y. 98.) In 1879, however, because of the decision in the Coughlin case (supra) that the attorney’s fien only accrued after judgment, section 66 of the Code of Civil Procedure was amended to give the attorney a lien on the cause of action before judgment. (L. 1879, ch. 542.) In 1899 the section was further amended to provide a remedy to determine and enforce the lien on the petition of either attorney or client. (L. 1899, ch. 61.) In this form it has been carried to sections 474 and 475 of the Judiciary Law, enacted originally in 1909. (L. 1909, ch. 35.)

At common law an attorney had two kinds of liens: (1) a retaining lien, which the attorney had on all papers in his possession until his claim for services was discharged; (2) a charging lien, which was a lien on a specific fund or judgment recovered through the efforts of the attorney for his compensation in that individual action or proceeding. (Goodrich v. McDonald, 112 N. Y. 157; Robinson v. Rogers, 237 N. Y. 467.) While both kinds of liens were of common-law origin, the charging lien has not only been defined but enlarged by the statute, which is now section 475 of the Judiciary Law.

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Bluebook (online)
270 A.D. 136, 58 N.Y.S.2d 591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-bank-v-oglesby-nyappdiv-1945.