Gray v. Lawson

36 Ga. 629
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedDecember 15, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 36 Ga. 629 (Gray v. Lawson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gray v. Lawson, 36 Ga. 629 (Ga. 1867).

Opinion

Walker, J.

1. There was no evidence that the defendants in the Court below had any notice of the attorney’s lien, prior to the consummation of the settlement. It is not pretended that the settlement was made for the purpose of defeating the collection of the amount which might be due the attorney. Good faith on the part of defendants and their counsel is admitted. Parties cannot, by settlement between themselves, defeat the attorney of any lien or claim under contact with his client, of which the opposite party had notice prior to the consummation of such settlement. Rev. Code, Sec. 1980. An attorney may have a lien or claim under contract with his client in cases of tort, as in cases of contract; but it must exist by contract, and will affect the opposite party only where he has notice thereof, prior to the consummation of a settlement of the case. The mere fact that an attorney appears in the cause, is not such notice as is contemplated by the section quoted ; the defendant should have notice of the claim of the attorney under a special contract with his client; otherwise, a settlement made in good faith with the opposite party, will be upheld. What is here said does not apply to liens of attorneys, except in a case like this, where a party in good faith settled a lawsuit withont notice of any lien or claim of the attorney by contract with his client.

2. If the facts had been such as to show a valid lien under Contract in favor of the attorney, the Court should have sent [631]*631the case to trial upon the merits, as between plaintiff and defendant, and if the jury should find, in favor of the plaintiff, an amount sufficient to pay the attorney his claim, -well and good. The right of the plaintiff’s attorney to recover his fee from defendant, must be determined by the finding of the jury. If the plaintiff have a valid cause of action, a . recovery may be had and if the jury, from the law and evidence, find there is due to the plaintiff an amount sufficient to pay the attorney’s claim, a verdict and judgment should be entered for the amount due him. Of course the settlement made with the party plaintiff is a protection against any claim he may have. It may appear on the trial that the plaintiff had no sufficient cause of action ; or if his action be maintainable, he may be entitled to mere nominal damages, much less than the claim of the attorney for his services ; in either event the defendant should not be made to pay for the benefit of the attorney, more than the plaintiff had a right originally to recover. To allow the attorney to recover the amount of his claim, by contract with his client, from the opposite party, without first showing that the opposite party was liable for so much, would be unjust. There was no evidence before the jury that the plaintiff had any real cause of action against the defendants, and it was error to permit a verdict to go against them without such evidence. It would have been error even if the proper notice of the attorney’s claim had been shown before the consummation of the settlement.

Judgment reversed.

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Related

Langston v. Roby
68 Ga. 406 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1882)
Green v. Southern Express Co.
39 Ga. 20 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1869)

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Bluebook (online)
36 Ga. 629, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray-v-lawson-ga-1867.