Lindner v. Hine

48 N.W. 43, 84 Mich. 511, 1891 Mich. LEXIS 837
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 48 N.W. 43 (Lindner v. Hine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lindner v. Hine, 48 N.W. 43, 84 Mich. 511, 1891 Mich. LEXIS 837 (Mich. 1891).

Opinion

Champlin, C. J.

Schucker & Hopp were the owners of a stock of liquors, and gave Gustave Hine. a chattel mortgage thereon. Afterwards they obtained a policy of insurance ixpon the stock from the People’s Insurance Company, the loss, if any, payable to Hine, as his mortgage interest might appear. A fire occurred, which consumed the property insured. The plaintiffs had been the attoi’neys of Schucker & ‘Hopp in some litigation which they had before that time had, and the plaintiffs made out the proofs of loss. The insux-ance company denied liability, and Schucker & Hopp thereupon assigned their claim under the policy to Gustave Hine; and the plaintiffs then brought suit against the company in Hine’s name, and recovei’ed a judgment for $1,066. Hine after-wards settled with the company by discounting some $91, and received the balance of the judgment, and discharged it of record.

The settlement was made and the money received without the knowledge or consent of the plaintiffs, who soon thereafter presented to Hine their bill for services and for $14.75 for costs, which they had paid to the clerk of [513]*513the court in the suit. Hine denied all liability to them, and refused payment. Plaintiffs brought suit before a justice of the peace, where the case was tried before a jury, who found for the defendant. Upon appeal to the circuit the cause was tried, and another verdict rendered for defendant. A new trial was granted, and under the instructions of the court the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiffs. Defendant assigns error upon the refusal of the court to charge as requested by the defendant and upon the charge as given.

Hpon the trial the plaintiffs introduced testimony which tended to prove that Mr. Hine employed them to bring the suit and perform the services sued for, and that he also employed Mr. Lyon, of the firm of Shepard & Lyon, to assist them in the preparation and trial. The defendant, Hine, introduced testimony tending to prove that he never employed plaintiffs to perform any services or bring any suit against the. insurance company for him, or in his name; that one of the plaintiffs met him on the street, and told him that suit had been commenced, and said to him: “Hine, you had better get Lyon to do the work in that insurance case;” and that he afterwards'employed Shepard & Lyon, and paid them for their services. He also introduced testimony tending to prove that Schucker & Hopp employed plaintiffs to commence suit in Hine’s name; that they were interested in the insurance, and in having the amount collected, as it would reduce their’ indebtedness to Hine that much.

There appears in the printed record what purports to be the defendant’s requests to charge, but they are not contained in the bill of exceptions, and it does not appear that they were called to the attention of the court, nor does the bill of exceptions show that any [514]*514exception was taken to any refusal to charge as requested. These cannot, therefore, be considered.

The declaration was upon all the common counts in assumpsit before the justice, and the following bill of particulars was filed, viz.:

“Services in suit of G. Hine vs. The People’s Insurance Company of Pittsburgh..............$150 00
“ Costs paid Wm. Gaffney, county clerk, in Hine vs. People’s Insurance Co............................ 14 75
Total amount..................... ..........$164 75.”

The verdict rendered by the jury was for $164=.75, which appears to be the precise amount claimed.

The court instructed the jury as follows:

“There is no denial in the case that Lindner, Porter & Haliey were managing that insurance case, and there is no denial that Mr. Hine knew that they were-managing it. There is no pretense anywhere that he objected to their managing it; and he knew that the suit was commenced; that he had a suit in this court against the insurance company, in which Lindner, Porter & Haliey were his attorneys. It is denied that he ever employed them to do it so as to make himself liable to pay them their fees, but it is not denied that he knew they were doing it. Neither is it denied, but it is claimed on all hands, that Schucker & Hopp knew that they were doing it. Now, they were doing it rightfully. There is no pretense anywhere that they were doing it wrong, — that they were representing a name there which they had a right to represent. They were not doing a wrong to Mr. Hine, then, in managing that suit, and prosecuting it to completion. They were not doing any wrong to Mr. Hine. The suit went on to completion under their management, and judgment was rendered, and execution issued, — a judgment was rendered which produced the money, at any rate. Now, I say to you as a matter of law that as soon as that judgment was rendered, whoever might be the owner of the judgment, Hine or Schucker & Hopp, Lindner, Porter & Haliey had a lien upon it for the amount of their fees and disbursements in the case. It was money that they had a lien upon. I almost [515]*515said a mortgage, but it is not technically a mortgage, but a lien on it, which entitles them to so much of that money as they are entitled to, so that whatever they were entitled to collect- from Schucker & Hopp or Hine they were entitled to take out of the money that was received upon that execution.”

He also instructed them that it was in evidence that Mr. Hine received the--money upon that judgment, and that in so doing he received money to which the plaintiffs were entitled, to an amount which the jury should find their services in procuring the judgment were reasonably worth, and the disbursements they had made, if any, for costs in the case, and that the jury must find a verdict for the plaintiffs for such amount. No objections were made to the introduction of testimony upon which the foregoing charge is based. It was admissible under the common counts in assumpsit, and, had objection been made, the bill of particulars could have been amended.

■There was no error in the instruction of the court. This action is not between the attorneys for the prevailing. party and the judgment debtor, and consequently the question of notice to such debtor does not arise in the case. The question is one between attorney and client. The undisputed fact that Mr. Hine received the money for which judgment was rendered, and discharged such judgment by indorsing a satisfaction thereof upon the execution, estops him from denying the authority of the attorneys in acting for him in procuring such judgment. If no original employment had been proved, this act would be a full and complete ratification of the acts and services performed by the attorneys in obtaining the judgment. He cannot take the money due by virtue of the judgment and deny the authority of the attorneys to procure such judgment for him. The relation is established by his own act.

The lien of the attorneys attaches to the fruits of the [516]*516judgment. It attaches to the money payable to the client if it is the proceeds of the labor aud skill of the attorneys. It attaches also to moneys received by way of compromise by the client in the cause, for the money is regarded as the fruit of the attorneys* labor and skill. And if the client settles the case after judgment, so as to deprive the attorneys of their Costs and fees, the latter have an action against the former. 1 Amer. & Eng. Enc.

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273 N.W. 566 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 N.W. 43, 84 Mich. 511, 1891 Mich. LEXIS 837, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lindner-v-hine-mich-1891.