In re the Estate of Montgomery

156 Misc. 583, 282 N.Y.S. 741, 1935 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1474
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedSeptember 9, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 156 Misc. 583 (In re the Estate of Montgomery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Surrogate's Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Estate of Montgomery, 156 Misc. 583, 282 N.Y.S. 741, 1935 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1474 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1935).

Opinion

Feely, S.

On this application by a client, under section 231-a of the Surrogate’s Court Act, to have this court fix the compensation of her sometime attorney, and order him to turn over to petitioner as executrix such papers now in his hands as belong to the estate of the above-named testator, it was shown that on May 28, 1934, the attorney and the executrix agreed in writing that he should do all the legal work necessary to liquidate the estate of testator before February 1, 1935, for the sum of $5,000. This included the services he had already rendered to that end since the death of testator on November 22, 1933.

The value of the estate, as set out in the tax deposition, was $613,782 and the net estate now is about $355,543. The executor’s commissions will be about $9,700. On such an estate the ordinary work contemplated in the contract would be reasonably worth $10,000 at the very least.

[584]*584On December 14, 1934, the client, without adequate cause, but in the due exercise of her “ implied ” legal rights as a client, discharged said attorney, who up to that time had substantially performed the contract on his part, in so far as he had been allowed to go. He had then done about five-sixths of the agreed work. His offer to complete, under the supervision of the substituted attorney, was declined. Computed on a general basis, independently of the contract, the reasonable value of the attorney’s services up to the discharge is found to be $13,000; and likewise computed, the reasonable value of the legal service necessary to bring this estate through judicial settlement from its stage at the date of the discharge of the first attorney, is found to be $1,500. The respondent’s claim that he is now entitled to recover in quantum meruit the $13,000 presents the main question, whether the independent reasonable value, even in excess of the agreed price of $5,000, can be allowed, notwithstanding it'be for only a part of the agreed work. Does reasonable value ” here mean the part’s value estimated independently of the contract, or does it mean the proportionate contract value of the part performed? As neither party has “ breached ” this contract, must the contract be regarded as stripped of all legal effect whatsoever, solely by reason of the client, in good faith, having duly exercised the “ implied ” option therein to have the service stop at the given time?

On this point in the law of damages some confusion has been occasioned by the different methods of recompensing that have been adopted, especially in cases where the service under a contingent fee retainer has been interrupted. Almost everywhere, as a general rule, there is read into the contract engaging the service of an attorney at law a peculiar implication that, as Judge Thomas observed (161 App. Div. 611), has not been deemed to characterize any other profession furnishing like intimate, confidential, personal sendee. This implication is that the client can, at will and without any cause, order the lawyer to desist from further performance of their contract; but the time element is important. As this right was impliedly reserved, the exercise of it, in good faith, where the lawyer is not at fault, leaves the contract standing unbreached. In cases where the retainer is conditioned on success, this further complication is added. When it comes down to estimating the results of such discharge by the client, the-rulings on the manner of compensating the attorney differ with the circumstances; and much more frequently in the contingent fee cases than in any others.

As this theory came to be subjected to a varied application in practice, the attempts to justify the unusual results that naturally flowed from it, led to some statements in the opinions which, by [585]*585generality or looseness of expression, added to the confusion by their excessive broadness — such as that by the discharge the contract was rescinded,” “ abrogated,” or “ cancelled;” and was no longer a measure,” or the "sole standard ” of compensation; and that the discharge relegated the lawyer to a recovery in “quantum meruit,” thereby implying the general rule that on breach a recovery in quantum meruit may, in some cases, exceed the agreed price. Stronger than its fellows among those broad expressions of " rescission ” is one that, like them, relates only to the contingent fee cases — and not accurately at that — and this is that the contract “ either wholly stands or totally falls,” and cannot be partially abrogated;” all of which must be read in the light of the continuing difference there seems to have been between the lower courts on one side and the highest court on the other, in that the latter has steadily refused to condition the quantum meruit on the ultimate result, whereas the lower courts, even as late as Kaplowitz v. Brooklyn Bus Corp. ([1934] 242 App. Div. 840), have generally made the award abide the event. They seem to ask, Why should not the unbreached contract still control? “ The intention of the parties is not that the attorney absolutely and in any event should receive as compensation one quarter of the amount of the claim ” (Roake v. Palmer, 119 App. Div. 64); nor did they intend that he should be paid in full if there was a substitution. (Id.) Quite distinctive of the case at bar, however, is the fact that here the parties intended the lawyer should be paid in any event, if he were not at fault, and this distinguishing feature seems to be sustained as such by a survey of the decisions.

The New York cases have not all been consistent one with another; and no case squarely in point has been found; but it seems fairly inferable from the decisions at large that the case of the contingent fee differs radically from that of the absolute or fixed fee; and that where the discharge of the attorney is made in good faith, it leaves the contract stand unbreached; whereas a discharge so timed as to be presumptively fraudulent is really a breach of the contract, and has been acted upon regularly as such, according to the general rule of damages, although such discharge has not been expressly labeled a breach ” as it should have been; and finally, that even in the contingent fee cases — and a fortiori in the fixed or absolute fee cases also — the retainer contract remains effective, as far as possible, after a bona fide discharge; and thus fixes the largest sum that may be recovered in any case or event.

In support of those inferences, it may be helpful to note first that in those New York cases which are, more or less, in accord with the majority rule, no recovery has exceeded the contract price.

[586]*586This attorney would be held down to the contract or less in the several jurisdictions that have passed on such matters. (L. R. A. 1917F, pp. 402, 413.) Some would hold under the ordinary rules of damages that $5,000 would be the value of his contract; others that the reasonable value of bis services up to the discharge was to be limited by the contract price; because a recovery for interrupted performance of such service, although based on reasonable value, could not in any event exceed the contract price. (Hunt v. Test, 8 Ala. 713; Smith v. Thompson, [Tex. Civ. App.] 233 S. W. 876; Brodie v. Watkins, 33 Ark. 545; Bell County Bd. of Ed. v. Lee, 239 Ky. 317; 39 S. W. [2d] 492; American Surety Co. v. Fruin-Bambrick Co., 182 Mo. App. 667; 166 S. W. 333; Henry v. Vance, 111 Ky. 72; 63 S. W.

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Related

Prial v. Supreme Court Uniformed Officers Ass'n
89 Misc. 2d 287 (Civil Court of the City of New York, 1977)
In re the Estate of Montgomery
158 Misc. 412 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
156 Misc. 583, 282 N.Y.S. 741, 1935 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-montgomery-nysurct-1935.