Lecatt v. Sallee

3 Port. 115
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1836
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 3 Port. 115 (Lecatt v. Sallee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lecatt v. Sallee, 3 Port. 115 (Ala. 1836).

Opinion

Hopkins, J.

The plaintiff in error filed the bill in this case, on the Chancery side of the Circuit Court of Mobile county, for an injunction and relief against a judgment at law, in favor of the defendant, and states, that in 1825, he employed the defendant, who was an attorney and counsellor at law, to institute and prosecute suits for several lots of land in the city of Mobile, to which the defendant had a claim. That, in consideration of the services to be rendered, by the defendant, the complainant gave him his note for eight thousand dollars, subject to conditions expressed in an agreement, signed by the defendant, and which was appended to the note; and that one of the conditions was, that if there should be no lot recovered, the note should be given up and cancelled. A copy of the agreement forms a part of [118]*118the bill, and shows that the note was to bear no interest during the pendency of the suits. The other material allegations are, that sometime after the note and agreement were made, a judgment was rendered against the complainant, in favor of the defendant, for the full amount of the note, upon an agreement between them, that the judgment should be subject to the same -conditions to which the note was.. That some of the suits had terminated in the success of the complainant, and others were undetermined. — • That he had paid paid a larger sum upon the judgment than the value of the lots recovered, entitled the defendant to receive; but that he claimed the full amount of it, and had caused an execution to issue, to collect it.

The defendant admits the note was made upon the consideration, and that he executed the agreement stated in the bill, but he denies that the judgment was taken subject the conditions to which the note was. He alleges that the improvident sale, by the complainant, of a part of the property, and his waste of the proceeds induced him to inform the complainant that he would decline prosecuting the suits, unless the complainant would confess a judgment for the amount of the note, upon which an execution to obtain satisfaction might issue, whenever the defendant chose; and, also, convey to him one of the lots as security for the judgment, until the complainant could put him into possession, when the conveyance should become absolute, and operate as a payment on the judgment, to the amount of the appraised value of the lot.

To this new agreement, proposed by an attorney to his client, it is alleged in the answer, the latter as[119]*119sented, and that the judgment was taken, subject to it, in February, lb26.

It does not appear that any of the suits had been determined, when an agreement was made that a judgment might be rendered upon the note. From the time of the commencement of the relation between the parties, the inference is, that none had been decided.

It is unnecessary to determine whether the judgment were taken on the agreement alleged in the bill, or upon that set up in the answer. If it were rendered upon either, the same question arises, which. is presented also by the facts charged and admitted. That the note was given, subject to the conditions contained in the agreement, both parties affirm —■ That an unconditional judgment was taken, for the full amount of the noto, twelve or thirteen months after the execution of it, and the employment of the defendant, as attorney, he admits. Both affirm it was rendered upon an agreement, but each differs from the other, in his statement of what the agreement was. That the defendant claims a right to the full amount of the judgment, the complainant alleges, and he admits.

Upon these facts, the question arises, can an attorney, during the connection between his client and himself, make, with his client, a binding contract to secure to himself greater compensation for his services than was agreed upon, when their relation commenced?

The question has never before been presented to this Court, but it has been often determined in England. There, it is a settled doctrine of equity, that an attorney cannot, while the business is unfinished, [120]*120in which he had been employed, receive any gift from his client, or bind his client in any mode, to make him greater compensation for his services than he would have a right to demand, if no contract should be made during the relation. If an attorney accept a gift from one thus connected with him, it may be recovered, in a Court of Chancery, by the donor or his creditors, should it be necessary for them to assert a right to it to satisfy their demands.

If a bond, or any other security for a greater compensation, be taken from a client, by his attorney, during their connection, it will, upon an application to a court of equity, be either set aside or allowed to stand only as security for the sum to which the attorney would have been entitled if no such security had been given. In some of the cases the prohibi-bition comprehends all dealings between attornies and their,, clients; in others,- it is confined to the particular business which was the inducement to form the relation, and an attorney is allowed to enter into contracts with his client upon any matter which is not the object of his concern as attorney. The principle thus limited, we deem the most reasonable.

In the case of Newman vs. Payne,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Port. 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lecatt-v-sallee-ala-1836.