Lee v. Lee

482 P.2d 745, 5 Or. App. 74, 1971 Ore. App. LEXIS 787
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMarch 25, 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 482 P.2d 745 (Lee v. Lee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lee v. Lee, 482 P.2d 745, 5 Or. App. 74, 1971 Ore. App. LEXIS 787 (Or. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

LANGTRY, J.

This appeal is from an order overruling a motion to vacate an order made after a summary hearing in which the court set attorney fees in a divorce case and imposed an attorney’s lien pursuant to ORS 9.370 (2) and 87.495.

The order by Circuit Judge Musick, who had been assigned from Washington County to Marion County to hear the divorce case, was the result of a motion to impress a lien against a trust fund for claimed attorney fees in the divorce suit. The motion was made by the defendant wife’s original attorney Ray G. Brown. The money was first paid in settlement of the divorce decree to the treasurer of Marion County. On January 30, 1970, attorney Ray Brown filed a motion requesting a summary hearing to determine his attorney fees and lien against this money. On February 2, 1970, Judge Musick made an order directing that the money be paid by the treasurer to attorney Richard IL Renn to be held in trust for defendant and for attorney Brown’s fees. The fund was thereafter held in trust by attorney Renn, who allegedly had replaced Ray Brown when the latter was discharged by defendant. The file does not show that the statutory procedure for change of attorney (ORS 9.380) was followed. Ray Brown conceded in testimony at the summary hearing, held in March 1970, that defendant discharged him in a letter dated October 19, 1969, which he received the next day. A notice in the file, dated November 19, 1969, and filed November *76 21, 1969, signed by Ray G-. Brown, Laurence Morley, and Richard H. Renn, in its pertinent part states:

“Notice is hereby given, at the request of the undersigned, Ray Gr. Brown, that the firm of Morley, Thomas, Orona & Kingsley, attorneys, and Richard H. Renn, attorney, of Lebanon, Oregon, are joined as counsel for Dorothy B. Lee.”

This notice is ambiguous. It is not clear from it whether the Morley firm and Renn are joined with Ray Brown as defendant’s counsel. Nothing we find in the voluminous file up to that time indicates that Ray Brown had been discharged by defendant. The defendant alleges that this notice and the action it reflects was executed and filed without her knowledge or consent.

Ray Brown cannot, with any justification, claim that any trust funds involved here, deriving from the divorce decree which are in Renn’s hands, are or ever were in any sense in his, Ray Brown’s, actual or constructive possession. The funds came to the county treasurer’s possession through a settlement negotiated while Ray Brown was defendant’s sole counsel, but they have been only in the county treasurer’s and attorney Renn’s possession since payment.

As a general rule, an order refusing to vacate an appealable order is not appealable. Columbia Auto Works v. Yates, 176 Or 295, 297, 156 P2d 561 (1945).

The order which set the attorney fee, dated March 10,1970, was appealable under ORS 19.010 (2) (c).

ORS 19.010:

(¿¿fc # # #
“(2) For the purpose of being reviewed on ap *77 peal the following shall be deemed a judgment or decree:
((# * # &
“(c) A final order affecting a substantial right, and made in a proceeding after judgment or decree.
((•% # * * # J?

See also Crawford v. Crane et ux, Hughes, 204 Or 60, 64, 282 P2d 348 (1955), where a similar order to pay attorney fees was appealed.

Instead of appealing from the March 10 order, defendant moved to vacate it, and when the court denied the motion she appealed from the denial order.

An exception to the general rule mentioned above is that where the original order is void an appeal will lie from an order refusing to vacate it. Columbia Auto Works v. Yates, supra, 176 Or at 297. Defendant claims that the original order setting fees and imposing the lien is void because the court had no jurisdiction to make it after a summary hearing.

The original order was entered pursuant to OES 9.370 (2):

OES 9.370:
“If an attorney claims a lien, under the provisions of ORS 87.495, upon money or papers subject to delivery under OKS 9.360, the court shall:
“(2) Summarily inquire into the facts on which the claim of a lien is founded, and determine the same *".

Defendant’s argument is that OES 9.370 (2) applies only to retaining liens. To retain a thing, one must necessarily possess it. Regardless of whether he continued to be her attorney, Eay Brown did not have *78 possession of the money. The entire statute applies to “* * # money * * * subject to delivery under OES 9.360 # # OES 9.360 refers only to property which has been “received” by an attorney in the course of his professional employment. Crawford v. Crane et ux, Hughes, 204 Or 60, supra, involved an appeal from a summary judgment pursuant to ORS 9.370 (2). The money in question there, as here, had been paid in satisfaction of the judgment to a county officer, where it remained. The court held:

“Four things must concur and be shown * * * before recourse can be had to any of the proceedings established by § 47-517 [now OES 9.370]. They are (1) that the party holding the property of another is an attorney; (2) that the property held belongs to a client; (3) that it has been received by the attorney in the course of professional employment by the client; and (4) that the attorney claims a retention lien thereon under § 67-1601 [now OES 87.495], authorized by subsection (1) of that statute. Then, and not until then, can § 47-517 be invoked by one seeking to discharge or enforce the claimed retention lien * # 204 Or at 66-67.

The case at bar fits into the first three requirements. Eenn was an attorney, holding in trust his client’s money which he received in the course of professional employment. However, as we have already noted the lien claimed by Brown is not a retaining or possessory lien. It is a charging lien.

In Crane, the court said:

“Since we hold that the lower court was without power [emphasis ours] to dispose of appellant’s charging lien in the manner it did, it is unnecessary for ns to consider the court’s further finding with reference to the amount due for services rendered by Mr. Hughes [emphasis theirs].” 204 Or at 68.

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Bluebook (online)
482 P.2d 745, 5 Or. App. 74, 1971 Ore. App. LEXIS 787, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-lee-orctapp-1971.