In re Klein

101 N.Y.S. 663
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 26, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 101 N.Y.S. 663 (In re Klein) 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
In re Klein, 101 N.Y.S. 663 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1906).

Opinion

CLARK, J.

In July, 1905, the petitioner, Henry Klein, as trustee in bankruptcy of the Buedingen Manufacturing Company, procured an order for George V. Fleckenstein to show cause at the Special Term appointed to be held at the courthouse in the city of Rochester on the 31st day of July, 1905, why he should not be compelled to pay over certain moneys collected by him as attorney for the Buedingen Manufacturing Company, for which corporation he had acted as attorney. On the return of said show cause order an order was made at such Special Term, referring the matter to the Honorable Frank Rice, of Canandaigua, N. Y., who was appointed referee for that purpose to take such evidence as might be adduced as to the amount and value of the services of the said George V. Fleckenstein, as attorney for the [664]*664Buedingen Manufacturing Company, and for William Marth, assignee of that company, and the amount of his lien as such attorney, if any, upon the sum of $5,448.74 received by him on the 17th day of May, 1905, and to report the evidence so taken to the court, with his opinion thereon, as to the amount and value of the said services and said attorney’s lien, if any. In pursuance of that order various hearings were had before said referee, and a large amount of testimony was taken, and the matter now comes before the court for hearing and decision-upon the report and opinion of said referee and the testimony taken before him, as well as the petition and affidavits filed in the said matter.

Counsel for said George V. Fleckenstein moves, upon the testimony, referee’s report, petition, and affidavits, and upon all the proceedings herein, for a dismissal of these proceedings, with costs, upon the following grounds: First. That the said Fleckenstein had rendered services for which he had not been paid at the time of the institution of these proceedings, and for which he had a lien' on the moneys mentioned in the petition. Second. That Fleckenstein had had a settlement prior to the commencement of the proceedings with Mr. Marth, the assignee of the Buedingen Manufacturing Company, and with Klein, as said trustee in bankruptcy, of the moneys received by him and referred to in the petition. Third. That the proceedings cannot be maintained because the relation of attorney and client had never existed between Fleckenstein and the petitioner, and because there was no proof that the rights of Marth, assignee and client of Fleckenstein, to the moneys mentioned in the petition have been transferred to the petitioner.

Mr. Fleckenstein had been the attorney for the Buedigen Manufacturing Company, and as such had rendered services to the said company, and had collected the moneys in question, but there had been no settlement or accounting between the attorney and the company when that corporation made a general assignment to William Marth, with whom subsequent dealings and correspondence were had by the attorney with reference to this matter, and subsequently, and before the institution of these proceedings, the Buedingen Manufacturing Company went into bankruptcy, and this petitioner, Henry Klein, was appointed trustee, and the rights of the said company to these funds in question came into the hands of this trustee in bankruptcy, and I cannot see any reason why these proceedings could not be maintained by the trustee of this bankrupt corporation as well as by the corporation itself, had no assignment ever been made, and had the corporation never been adjudged a bankrupt. An attorney and counselor at law is an officer of the court, and when he retains his client’s money, claiming a lien thereon for his services, the Supreme Court clearly has jurisdiction to determine the whole question summarily on application to compel the payment of the moneys retained, and the proceedings, both in their inception, on the reference and the present application, are all regular, and are clearly within the power of this court to entertain. Matter of Application of Knapp, etc., 85 N. Y. 284; Matter of Gillespie v. Mulholland, 12 Misc. Rep. 40, 23 N. Y. Supp. 33; Bowling Green Savings Bank v. Todd, 52 N. Y. 489. I cannot agree with the learned [665]*665counsel for the attorney that there was an account stated, or a settlement between Mr. Fleckenstein and the assignee or the trustee. It is true that before the bankruptcy proceedings were completed, but after they had been instituted, Mr. Fleckenstein, after deducting from the funds certain charges, sent to the assignee a check for something over $2,400, to wit, $2,421.80, and the claim is made that because that check was retained several months that it became an account stated. I cannot agree with that contention, for it appears from the evidence that within a very few days after Mr. Fleckenstein had sent that check to the assignee, one of the attorneys who was then acting for the assignee in other matters, protested to Mr. Fleckenstein that the assignee could not safely accept the check, and there was some conversation between Mr. French, the attorney then representing the assignee, and Mr. Fleckenstein, looking toward the institution by Mr. Fleckenstein of a proceeding to determine the amount of his lien, if any. There was considerable conversation between Mr. French and Mr. Fleckenstein with reference to this matter, and no agreement was made. Mr. Fleckenstein insisted that, if any proceedings were instituted, the assignee was the party who should take the initial step, but Mr. French all the time insisted that the assignee could not safely adjust the matter by accepting the check Mr. Fleckenstein had sent him, and indicated a desire that the matter of the amount of the attorney’s lien should be fixed by some judicial proceeding. The bankruptcy proceedings followed, but there was no agreement with reference to this matter, and the trustee in bankruptcy, when we consider the duties he was obliged to perform immediately following his qualifying as trustee, proceeded to take up the matter in question and return the check within a reasonable time, and exercised due and reasonable diligence in the matter. The minds of the parties never met with reference to this transaction, either at the time or subsequent to the sending of the check by Mr. Fleckenstein, and taking all the circumstances into account, the prompt conversation and objections by Mr. French, and the exacting business necessary in the bankruptcy proceedings, I do not think that the retaining of the check could be considered as an acceptance of it, and do not think that it could be considered as an account stated. I have no doubt that Mr. Klein, as trustee, succeeded to the assets of the Buedingen Manufacturing Company, which had been transferred by general assignment to Mr. Marth, and that the trustee in bankruptcy is clearly within his rights in instituting these proceedings. The learned and experienced referee, who heard the evidence in this matter and has made a very clear and exhaustive report, properly finds that Mr. Fleckenstein rendered valuable services to the Buedingen Manufacturing Company, and after listening to the evidence of all the witnesses, and after allowing the attorney what he considered upon that evidence fair compensation for the concededly valuable services that he rendered, the referee finds that there was still in the hands of the attorney $3,-502.08. The referee’s findings are based upon sufficient evidence, and I see no reason why the findings of the referee with reference to the amount due Mr. Fleckenstein, and the amount still remaining in his hands should not be adopted by the court, and they are adopted.

[666]*666Counsel for Mr. Fleckenstein, at the close of the testimony, moved to have stricken out the evidence of Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
101 N.Y.S. 663, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-klein-nysupct-1906.