Fischer-Hansen v. Brooklyn Heights Railroad

63 A.D. 356, 71 N.Y.S. 513, 1901 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1612
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 63 A.D. 356 (Fischer-Hansen v. Brooklyn Heights Railroad) 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
Fischer-Hansen v. Brooklyn Heights Railroad, 63 A.D. 356, 71 N.Y.S. 513, 1901 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1612 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Hibsohbebg, J.:

The plaintiff is an attorney and counselor at law, and he has brought an equitable action for the purpose of procuring the determination and securing the enforcement of his lien created in an action brought by him as attorney in behalf of one of the defendants against the other. He alleges in his amended complaint that he was retained by the defendant Louis Olsen to commence and prosecute an action against the defendant the Brooklyn Heights Railroad Company for damages for personal injuries; that by written agreement he was to have one-half “ of the verdict recovered iu said action; ” that on the commencement of the action he served written notice on the defendant therein that (to quote its language) “ I have a lien under my written retainer by the plaintiff, upon the papers and upon the subject matter of the within entitled action, for my fees, services and disbursements, and you are hereby requested to make no settlement with the plaintiff, or any other person, but to make it with the undersigned; ” that after the action was at issue the parties settled it, the defendant therein paying $1,500 to the plaintiff therein and receiving a general written release from the latter; that no financial, provision was made for the satisfaction of the plaintiff’s lien as attorney, and that the plaintiff in such action is financially irresponsible, and has gone to the Kingdom of Norway.

The demurrer of the respondent, the Brooklyn Heights Railroad Company, was sustained upon the ground that the amended complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. I think the conclusion reached by the court at Special Term was correct. On this appeal no authority is cited in support of the [358]*358proposition that an action is maintainable under the circumstances detailed. No such action existed at common law, and none such has been created by statute. The plaintiff has an adequate remedy for the wrong of which he complains without bringing a new and independent suit, and to that remedy, as declared in a long and unbroken line of decisions in this State, he should be remitted unti. the Legislature sees fit to authorize a foreclosure action.

The attorney’s lien exists by statute. It is conferred by section 66 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The lien is upon the client’s cause of action, claim or counterclaim, but it attaches to the verdict, report, decision, judgment or final order in his client’s favor, and. the proceeds thereof in whosoever hands they may come. This lien cannot be affected by any settlement between the parties, and the court, upon petition of the client or attorney, may determine and enforce it.

• These are all the provisions of the Code in relation to this subject, and it is not easy to perceive how they justify the plaintiff’s action against the respondent. ' The action recognizes and upholds the settlement as inherently just and fair, and is necessarily based upon its maintenance and continuance as a valid and binding termination of the suit first brought, and as a complete extinction of the client’s causé of action. There is, therefore, no longer in existence that upon which the Code gives the plaintiff a lien, viz., a cause of action, for it has been merged in the settlement and payment which, by. the logic of this action, the plaintiff upholds and affirms. Neither . can there ever be that to which such a lien attaches, viz., a verdict, report, decision, judgment or final order in his client’s favor. Assuming that the plaintiff’s allegation that he was to have one-half ■ of the verdict is to be construed as including onedialf of any sum paid by way of settlement before verdict, he doubtless has a lien upon the money in his client’s hands, but an action, against -the respondent is not necessary to the assertion and enforcement of a lien upon and attaching to that fund. And it is very apparent that the reaching of that fund is not the primary object of the present action, if an object at all. " The action, in any view which can be taken, seems, therefore, inconsistent with the plaintiff’s attitude of affirmation and approval of the settlement in question on' any theory that his statutory lien can survive such a settlement unassailed.

[359]*359But in reality the plaintiff does assail the settlement, not as to its amount, but because the money has been paid over to his client "without his knowledge, and he thereby, by reason of his client’s insolvency or dishonesty, or both, has been defrauded. The books are full of cases where, under such circumstances, complete and adequate relief has been afforded by the courts to an attorney so abused, but always in the action in which the lien is created, and in which alone it can exist under the present statutory conditions. 'That an independent action cannot be maintained for a redress of ■the fraud has often been expressly asserted and impliedly determined. It is true that where a defendant, as the respondent here, pays over money to an impecunious or dishonest plaintiff in wrong of the latter’s attorney, a strong argument could be made in favor of the maintenance of an action for the damages incurred, but that would be a common-law action having no direct relation whatever to the ■enforcement of the lien. It would be analogous to an action brought by the assignee of a claim where the debtor has paid the assignor with knowledge, and in fraud, of the assignment. But manifestly such an action, and the analogies incident to it, lend no aid to the support of an equity suit brought ostensibly for the purpose of foreclosing a lien, but predicated in fact upon its lawful extinction.

That a common-law action could not be maintained by the attorney to recover damages for the settlement was decided by the ■General Term of the Court of Common Pleas in Tullis v. Bushnell (12 Daly, 217). The court held that there being at the time of settlement no verdict, report, decision or judgment to which his lien may attach, he could not maintain suit against the parties to the ■original action for damages on the ground that by the settlement his lien upon the cause of action was destroyed.

Formerly the attorney’s lien attached only to .the judgment, but the fact that now it covers the cause of action, and exists from the time of the commencement of the suit, can in no wise impair the force of the judicial reasoning by which the right to a separate •action for its enforcement has been denied. On the contrary, that reasoning proceeded upon the theory that, inasmuch as judgment was necessary to the creation of the lien, the client could settle before judgment of his own motion and will. It has been frequently held, however, that the parties may settle at any stage, not[360]*360withstanding the existence of the lien as now created, and consequently the same condition exists in that respect as prompted the courts to deny the right to a separate action. “ In looking through the reported cases referred to in argument,” said Senator Verplanck in McFarland v. Wheeler (26 Wend. 467, 476), “I was much struck with the wisdom of a remark of Lord Ellenborough, made after a long professional and judicial experience: In a case of lien, we should be ■ anxious to- tread cautiously, and on sure grounds, before we extend it beyond the limits of decided cases.’ (1 Maule & Sel. 168.)” In Goodrich v. McDonald (112 N. Y. 157, 164) Judge Earl said: “ After a very careful search we have been unable to find any case where an attorney has been permitted to enforce his lien upon a judgment for his services by an equitable action.” In Randall v.

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Bluebook (online)
63 A.D. 356, 71 N.Y.S. 513, 1901 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1612, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fischer-hansen-v-brooklyn-heights-railroad-nyappdiv-1901.