Dean v. Driggs

31 N.Y.S. 548, 82 Hun 561, 89 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 561, 64 N.Y. St. Rep. 183
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 14, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 31 N.Y.S. 548 (Dean v. Driggs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dean v. Driggs, 31 N.Y.S. 548, 82 Hun 561, 89 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 561, 64 N.Y. St. Rep. 183 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

O’BRIEN, J.

Upon a motion made for the substitution of attorneys, a reference was ordered to determine the amount of the attorney's lien in several proceedings in which the substitution was desired. The referee found the amount due to be $3,470.10. Upon [549]*549the motion to confirm the report, the appellant asked the court to establish his lien ait the sum of $6,470.16, instead of the qmount found by the referee, such claim being made up of $500 in addition to the amount found due in the case of Dean v. Driggs, and of $2,500 for services in the matter of Marques. The court refused to grant such increase, and it is on account of such refusal that this appeal is taken.

The first question presented is as to the right to $500 additional to the amount allowed by the referee in the case of Dean v. Driggs. This was an action to recover the sum of $3,500 and interest, and was first tried in 1887, and the complaint was dismissed, but upon appeal to the general term the judgment was reversed and a new trial granted. 7 N. Y. Supp. 449. The second trial took place in June, 1888, when the plaintiff recovered judgment, from which an appeal was taken, which resulted in November, 1889, in the granting of a new trial. Subsequent to the second trial, and prior to the argument of the appeal, and on January 28,1889, the attorney and client had a settlement involving this action, among several others, by the terms of which the attorney agreed to accept $1,200 in compensation for services in all matters prior to October, 1888, “exclusive of taxable costs and disbursements, which, however, are not to be charged except in the event that a collection is made in any of the matters where costs have been awarded to us, or either of us, and included in the judgment.” After the argument of the second appeal, Dean & Co. paid the attorneys $250; and these two amounts of $1,200 and $250 the referee has found were in full of services to and including the second appeal, and that they are indebted to the attorney only for services rendered subsequent to the second appeal. The third trial resulted in a verdict in Dean’s favor, which, upon appeal, was affirmed at the general term, and was pending in the court of appeals when this motion for substitution was made. In his report, the referee thus estimates the services subsequent to the second appeal:

“(24) That R. J. Dean & Company are Indebted to said Edward S. Hatch for services rendered in said action subsequent to the second appeal thereof only. (25) That the services rendered in said action after the second appeal up to the time of entry of the order of reference herein are reasonably worth the sum of nine hundred dollars, exclusive of taxable costs. (26) That the amount of the taxable costs in said action are six hundred and twenty-two and 79-100 dollars. (27) That there is due and owing from Robert J. Dean & Company to Edward S. Hatch said sums of nine hundred dollars and six hundred and twenty-two and 79-100 dollars, taxable costs in said action,—in all, the sum of one thousand five hundred and twenty-two and 79-100 dollars.”

It may be assumed, as claimed by the appellant, that the amount of costs connected with the suit up to and including the second appeal was $500, and such costs, by the agreement of the parties, were to go, if collected, to the attorney; and the contention of the appellant is that the referee, after deciding that $1,522.79‘was a proper compensation for the third trial and the appeal therefrom, erroneously applied the sum of $500, the costs to which the attorney was [550]*550entitled, as compensation for his prior services. If the premise upon which this argument is based was correct,—that the referee allowed for such services $1,522.79,—then the conclusion would follow that, in addition thereto, the attorney was entitled to the taxable costs which, by the agreement between the parties, were reserved for the benefit of the attorney. Wé think, however, that this claim rests upon too slender a foundation. All this discussion would have been avoided if the referee had more clearly expressed himself in his findings; but an examination thereof will show that he had in mind the agreement entered into between the parties by which the costs were to go to the attorney, and that in fixing the value of the services he found that they were reasonably worth the sum of $900, and in addition thereto he found that the attorney was entitled to costs, which made up the amount to $1,522.79. Though not so explicitly stated, there can be no doubt that this was the intent and meaning of the referee when, in his finding in regard to the value of such services, he says they “are reasonably worth the sum of $900, exclusive of taxable costs.” Apart, however, from such finding, this being in form a reference to hear and determine the matters of difference, but in fact one to take evidence and report to the court, so that it might be enabled, upon the motion for substitution, to fix the amount of the attorney’s lien, we are at liberty, as we have done, to examine the record, as no doubt the court below did, to determine what would be fair and reasonable compensation to the attorney. Having in mind the fact that he had been paid for services up to and including the second appeal, we think that the sum of $900 was full compensation for the third trial of an action involving $3,500, in which, in addition to such amount, the attorney was awarded $622.79, a sum equal to the taxable costs upon the three trials.

The second claim is that appellant is entitled to receive $2,500, in addition to what has been allowed him, for services in various matters classed together as the “Matter of Marques.” It appears that Marques, who had organized a corporation known as the “American Package Company,” in connection with a man named Gair, owed the attorney for services in relation thereto, and had also become indebted to Mr. Dean in the sum of over $7,000. In 1886, a dispute having arisen between Marques and Gair, the former desired proceedings taken with a view to realizing on the assets of the American Package Company. Such proceedings the attorney was disinclined to undertake upon the responsibility of Marques alone. At the same time, Mr. Dean brought to the attorney his claim against Marques for collection, and, as means of accomplishing the latter, an arrangement was made by which' Marques assigned his claims against the company to Dean, as security for Dean’s claim against him, and the attorney undertook the proceedings against the company. The question in dispute is whether such proceedings were to be taken upon the retainer of Mr. Marques, or solely upon the retainer of Mr. Dean, and under what arrangement or agreement the attorney proceeded. In support of the view that it was solely upon the responsibility of Dean that the attorney proceeded, a letter writ[551]*551ten by Dean to Marques under date of January 27, 1888, was produced, which reads:

“Friend Marques: I have seen Mr. Hatch, and he says he has had a talk with you, and told you he would twist Gair out of his shoes, and help you out, if I would guaranty him, and I have told him that I would. Now, I advise, you to give him the matter entirely, for he knows all about the whole affair, and he will make Mr. Gair understand that he cannot do with us as he pleases before we get through" with him. Now, don’t neglect this matter. Do it at once.
“Yours, truly, R. J. Dean.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 N.Y.S. 548, 82 Hun 561, 89 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 561, 64 N.Y. St. Rep. 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dean-v-driggs-nysupct-1894.