Lyon v. Hires

46 A. 985, 91 Md. 411, 1900 Md. LEXIS 53
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 14, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 46 A. 985 (Lyon v. Hires) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lyon v. Hires, 46 A. 985, 91 Md. 411, 1900 Md. LEXIS 53 (Md. 1900).

Opinion

Page, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an action in assumpsit brought to recover a sum of money claimed by the appellees to be due .them from the appellants on account of certain transactions connected with the purchase of the steamer Edgecombe. It appears that by an agreement in writing, dated the ninth day of April, 1887, the appellants agreed to sell the steamer to the appellees for the sum of forty-five hundred dollars, the title thereof to pass only when the amount was paid. To secure the payment of the purchase-money, the appellees were to assign all their title in and to a reversionary interest held by them under the will of I. D. Clawson, of New Jersey, also a policy of life insurance, and to keep the boat insured for the benefit of the vendors. If the appellees failed to pay the purchase-money, as required by the contract, or if at' any time they become in arrears as much as $200, the appellants had the right of cancelling the agreement and resuming possession of the boat, in which event the appellees were to pay as charter-money at the rate of $780 per annum for the use of the boat. The reversionary interest, as well as the policies of insurance, in case of cancellation of the contract, were specifically made liable to the *417 appellants for premiums, repairs on boat and all bills for which the boat would be liable. This agreement, the principal features of which we have thus stated, was followed by a substitutionary agreement on the fifth day of February, 1887. In this it was stated that the appellees were “ desirous of having the title of the steamboat transferred to themselves,” and that the appellants had agreed to do so upon the terms hereinafter mentioned. ” These terms were as follows : In consideration of the transfer of the title of the steamer to the appellees, they agreed to pay the purchase-money with interest, also all sums paid by the appellants, “ or which may hereafter be paid by them for account of premiums paid on the” life insurance policy and the insurance on the steamer, “and any other expenses,” and upon failure or refusal of the parties (the appellees) “ to make said payments or any of them within the time mentioned,” then the appellants shall have the right “ to sell at public or private sale, the said interest under the will of Isaiah D. Clawson conveyed to them, and execute a deed therefor to the purchaser thereof, and to apply the proceeds, first, to the payment of their said claim of $4,500 and interest, and other payments made by them, and also the costs of said sale, and the balance, if any, to pay over to the said parties of the second part.” It was further agreed that the life insurance policy should be renewed from time to time, at the expense of the appellees, until the claim of the other parties shall have been fully paid. The life-tenant of the legacy died in July, 1896, and the appellees having failed to pay any part of their indebtedness, the appellants proceeded to collect from the executors of the estate of Clawson. Of the two executors named in the will, one had died and the other had resigned and the administrator-appointed in their place, denied that the appellants or the appellees had any interest in the reversion. The appellants, were therefore compelled to institute legal proceedings in the New Jersey Court, which resulted, after protracted litigation, in their recovering the whole fund amounting to *418 $9,322. The amount then due the appellants, as appears from a statement in the record, was $8,997.23. The difference between these two sums', being $324.77, the appellants contend should be applied in partial payment of counsel fees that were necessarily incurred by them in prosecuting the suit.

The theory upon which this contention is made is that having been necessarily incurred in securing the legacy, proper counsel fees should be paid out of the fund. There as no evidence that the appellees employed counsel themselves, nor that there was any agreement between the parties in reference to the matter, other than the agreements already mentioned, and these will be considered in this connection later on. Apart from these agreements, it is difficult to perceive any ground, according to well-established principles, upon which these attorneys’ fees can in this case be made- a charge upon the common fund. It is true the suit resulted in a common benefit to both appellees and appellants, but that alone is not sufficient. Before a legal charge can be sustained there must be a contract of employment, either expressly made or superinduced by the law upon the facts of the case.” McGraw v. Canton, 74 Md. 559. Unless such contract, express or implied, can- be established the party who engages counsel must pay for his services.

In the case of Wilson v. Kelly, 30 S. C. 483, cited approvingly in B. & O. R. R. Co. v. Brown, 79 Md. 447, one distributee brought an action for. settlement, partition and distribution against her codistributees; and though her attorney defeated a claim asserted by one of the heirs, and reduced a claim presented by a judgment creditor, it was held the attorney was not entitled to a fee out of the fund, although his services were beneficial to all the heirs alike.

So in ex-parte Lynch, &c., 25 S. C. 193, a mortgagor was sued by strangers for the recovery of the mortgaged land, and being advised he could not successfully resist, he informed the mortgagee that he proposed to make terms; *419 thereupon the mortgagee, with leave of the Court, did make defense and succeeded in defeating the claim ; it'was held that the attorneys for the mortgagee were not entitled to payment for their services out of the surplus value of the mortgaged land.

The appellants in this case acted solely for themselves in prosecuting the New Jersey suit. Their object was to recover the legacy for their own benefit; and having done so, without any arrangement, in fact, or to be implied by the circumstances, with the appellees, the latter cannot be called upon to contribute out of their share of the fund to the payment of counsel fees. Carter v. Wake, L. R. 4 Ch. Div. 605.

The cases cited by the appellant’s counsel to sustain his position, may all be distinguished from the case at bar. In those cases the facts were such as in equity and fair dealing were sufficient to raise an assent upon the part of those who received the benefit of the litigation. In this case we have nothing more than the efforts of a creditor to secure his claim.

We come now to the consideration of the agreement between the parties and its effect upon the question involved in this case. The original agreement did not contemplate a change in the title to the boat until the purchase-money was fully paid.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 A. 985, 91 Md. 411, 1900 Md. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lyon-v-hires-md-1900.