Garfield v. Kirk

65 Barb. 464, 1873 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 94
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 65 Barb. 464 (Garfield v. Kirk) 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
Garfield v. Kirk, 65 Barb. 464, 1873 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 94 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1873).

Opinion

By the Court, Mullin, P. J.

This action was brought by the plaintiff, an attorney and counsellor of this court, to recover for services rendered for the defendant as such.

The defences were: 1. A general denial; 2. Payment for the said services; and, 3. A counter-claim for money [466]*466paid, property sold and delivered to the plaintiff, and money lent and advanced.

The issues were referred to a referee, who ordered judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $3,337.68. From that judgment the defendant appeals.

There are a great number of exceptions taken by the defendant to the reception and rejection of evidence, many of which are frivolous, and the others may be classified and briefly disposed of.

On. the trial, the plaintiff introduced himself, and called several other witnesses, to prove the value óf the services for which the action was brought. The plaintiff testified to his retainer by the defendant; the actions which he brought or defended for him; the nature of the services; and the time expended. He was then inquired of what his services in each case were worth. The evidence was objected to by the defendant’s counsel; the objection was overruled, and the defendant’s counsel excepted.

If I understand the ground of objection, it is that the witness should have been required to state the particular things clone by him in each case, and the value of • each; the number of folios in pleadings drawn by him; and the number of days employed in making searches, in trying causes, &c. ; and that it was not competent to give an estimate óf all the services rendered in a suit.

Before the Code, an attorney could recover of his client, for services in an action, only the sums allowed by the fee bill established by the legislature, by which the compensation was allowed for the various proceedings in a cause. (McFarland v. Grary, 8 Cowen, 253. Brady v. City of New York, 1 Sandf. 583, 584.) The client had the right to require the attorney to have his bill taxed by a taxing officer, and when taxed, the amount was not open to contestation. When, however, the services were not in actions, the attorney was bound [467]*467to prove the particular service rendered, and the value thereof.

Since the Code, the fee bill is not the measure of the value of an attorney’s services. He must prove them, as before the Code, when they were not rendered in a suit. (Code, § 303. Stow v. Hamlin, 11 How. 452.) To entitle the plaintiff to recover, he was not required to swear to each notice drawn and served, and how much it was worth. Such a rule would lead to endless pro-' lixity on the trial of actions for such services. And it is doubtful whether it would not be the most expensive mode, to the defendant, of getting at the value. The defendant, on cross-examination, can satisfy himself as to the details of the service, if he desires, but it cannot be that the plaintiff is obliged to enter into such detail. It is enough for him to prove, in general terms, the proceedings in the cause, the time occupied in the performance of any part of the services by which them value was enhanced, and the value of the whole, or in detail, as he may elect.

Another class of objections is to the admissibility of attorneys, who were called to. give their opinions as to the value of the plaintiff’s services, founded partly on their personal knowledge of the services, and partly upon the testimony of the plaintiff and others who were personally acquainted with them.

The ground of the objection, as I understand it, is that the value of the services cannot be proved by the opinions of witnesses, nor by persons not personally acquainted with them. This objection applies as well to the plaintiff’s evidence as to- that of the experts called by him.

In Beekman v. Platner, (15 Barb. 550,) this precise point was decided. It was there held that the testimony of an attorney at law, who has heard the services of a party described by other witnesses, is admissi[468]*468Me, in respect to sncli services. (Lewis v. Trickey, 20 Barb. 387.)

Another class of objections is to the competency of evidence of the value of the land which was involved in the litigation carried on by the plaintiff, for the defendant. It requires no greater labor to draw a complaint or answer, or to render any other specific service, in "a case in which the amount involved is $1,000,000, than in one in wliich it is $100. And yet, every lawyer knows that the labor bestowed upon a case is, as a general rule, in proportion to the magnitude of the interest involved. While the labor in drawing a pleading may be no more, when the amount involved is large, than when it is small, yet the labor in the examination of authorities and documents preliminary to drawing it, and the care bestowed upon the pleading itself, would be much greater in one case than in the other. This extra care and labor must be compensated ; and it may be measured with some degree of accuracy by the amount involved in the snit. The attorney who does the labor can estimate, himself, the value of his extra labor, but there is no way another lawyer can acquire the means of estimating the value of the services, better than by being informed of the magnitude of the interests involved. It is true an attorney may be negligent in the management of the most important cases, and seek to obtain a measure of compensation he has not earned. This is not the general rule. The client, when sued by an attorney who has not conducted his case energetically and skillfully, can generally expose Mm, and. limit his recovery to a fair and just compensation.

The value of the property involved in a litigation is a legitimate subject of proof, in an action by the attorney, for his services, against his client.

What was said by the defendant to Grott, in relation to the importance of the plaintiff’s services in the suit relating to the land, was competent. It was in no just [469]*469sense a privileged communication. It was offered and received to show" the defendant’s estimate of the plaintiff’s services, and for this purpose was clearly competent.

The plaintiff gave evidence tending to prove that part of his services were rendered under a special contract. The plaintiff disclaimed an intention to rely on such a contract, and upon the defendant’s motion the evidence in relation to it was stricken out. The defendant’s counsel now insists that striking it out did not correct the error made in receiving it, and that by reason of it the judgment should be reversed; and he cites Erben v. Lorillard, (19 N. Y. 299.)

The trial in that case was by a jury ; and greater care is required to guard a jury against acting upon the impression that illegal evidence makes upon them minds, than when the trial is before a judge or referee. It would lead to great expense and loss of time should it be held that a judge or referee could not disregard illegal evidence which had been admitted, and that in every such case another trial must be had, in order that it may be got rid of. But the case cited does not go this length. Even when the trial is before a jury, if it is made to appear that the illegal evidence had no influence in producing the verdict, the instruction to disregard it, will cure the error.

With all deference, I think the rule, as thus modified, will prove to be unfortunate in practice.

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Bluebook (online)
65 Barb. 464, 1873 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garfield-v-kirk-nysupct-1873.