Nickels v. Kane's Adm'r

82 Va. 309
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJuly 15, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 82 Va. 309 (Nickels v. Kane's Adm'r) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nickels v. Kane's Adm'r, 82 Va. 309 (Va. 1886).

Opinion

Lacy, J.,

’delivered the opinion of the court.

The suit is a foreign attachment in equity, brought by the administrator of Henry S. Kane, deceased, against the appellant, Wm. H. Nickels, who is a non-resident, under the 11th sec. of chap. 148, Va. Code. There were certain debts, evidenced by the bond of the defendant, which were not controverted. The controversy has arisen, and the contest in this court is over and concerning the following agreement, marked Exhibit “C.:”

We promise to pay Henry S. Kane ten per cent, on the amount that he may succeed in getting the decree reduced, which has been rendered by the circuit court of Scott county, in favor of Walter H. Nickels against the undersigned, William Nickels. As witness our hands and seals, this 31st day of August, 1859.

WILLIAM NICKELS. [Seal.] '
WM. H. NICKELS. [Seal.]

Henry S. Kane was a lawyer, and a decree had been rendered against the said William Nickels in favor of Walter H-Nickels, on the 25th day of May, 1859, for $6,896.03, and $1,496.47 of interest, aggregating $8,365.50.

[311]*311An appeal was thereupon obtained to this court; and the case was decided on the 21st day of October, 1867, when this court struck out of the account all the claims against the said Wm. Nickels, prior [to May, 1852, when Walter H. Nickels moved from Pattonsville to Estillville, and remanded the case for the trial of an issue framed in this court, and directed to be tried in the said circuit court by a jury.

The amount of the reduction by this court, comprising all the said items of the claim prior to May, 1852, amounted to $2,890.80 of principal, and $614.29 of interest, as set forth in statement A 8 of Commissioner Morrison’s report in this cause. We have not seen the original record of the case on the first appeal, and this amount is not stated in the decree of this court of October 21st, 1867, except in the general terms stated above. But the statement of the commissioner, A 8, is not excepted to, nor denied as to its accuracy as to this amount.

The commissioner in this cause made alternate statements as to this claim by statement A 3, allowing ten per centum on the amount of the reduction stated above, with interest on the principal up to March, 1884, from October 21st, 1859, ascertaining the amount due to be $1,201.36.

By statement A 2 the commissioner adopted a different statement, which was as follows:

“When the case went back the issue was not tried, and H. S. Kane died. After the death of Kane, the lawyer, and before the trial of the issue in the circuit court, the parties compromised the case, Wm. Nickels agreeing to pay an agreed amount of $2,500.”

In statement A 2 Commissioner Morrison took the original recovery of $6,896.03, and $8,643.60 interest, and deducted the $2,500 paid by Nickels from the $8,043 of interest, and found the $6,896.03 of principal and $6,143.60, the residue of the interest, making $13,039.63 as the amount of the reduction [312]*312obtained by H. S. Kane by the appeal to this court and its decree of October 21st, 1867, and gave ten per centum on that amount, adding, as in statement A 3, the amount due under the bonds of $124.33 and $92.12 of interest, and showed a balance of $2,178.18 as the amount due under the agreement stated above as Exhibit G.

The appellant excepted, and the court overruling the plaintiff’s exception to statement A 2 and A 1, and sustaining the exception which was filed by the appellee to statement A 3, gave a decree for the amount found due by statement A 2.

From this decree an appeal was obtained to this court. The first assignment here is that the contract contained in Exhibit 0 was champertous,' being a contract for a part of the recovery.

Champerty may be defined to be a bargain with the plaintiff or defendant in a suit for a portion of the land or other matter sued for in case of a successful termination of the suit, which the champertor undertakes to carry on at his own expense; and champerty avoids the contracts into which it enters.

• Champerty with us must be considered upon the principles of the common law, there being no statute in our code of laws defining it. By the act of December 8, 1792, the legislature defining it enacted tlius: “Champertors be they that move pleas and suits, and cause them to be moved by their own procurement, or by others, and sue them at their own proper costs and charges, to have a .part of the land in variance or part of the gain.” Code 1819, p. 558. But this act, as will be seen, was merely declaratory of the common law, as we have defined it above. It was, however, repealed by the code of 1849, and the common law was revived as to that matter, even if the statute had repealed it; for if the common law be repealed by a statute, which is itself afterwards repealed, the common law [313]*313is thereby revived. Insurance Co. of the Valley v. Bailey’s Adm’r, 16 Gratt. 384; Booth’s Case, 16 Gratt. 529; Moseley v. Brown, 76 Va. 424; opinion of Burks, Judge.

But the contract in question is not liable to that objection in any aspect. It is a contract between an attorney and his client, in the regular course of the practice of his profession, for a part of the recovery as a compensation for his services.

In the case of Evans v. Bell, 6 Dana, 479, it was . held that a contract by a client to pay his attorney a sum equal to one-tenth of the amount recovered, was not void for champerty. Sprye v. Porter, 7 E. & B. 58; 26 L. I., Q. B. 64.

If the attorney should agree to pay the expenses of the suit and the costs of jdie litigation, it would be otherwise, though in New York, it has been held that this would hot come within the inhibition of the law. Fogerty v. Jordon, 2 Rob. 319; See also the case of Major v. Gibson, 1 Patton & Heath, 48. In this case, which was decided in 1855, the contract, which was in dispute and the subject of the controversy, was a contract made by attorneys with their client in 1834, before the act of 1840, supra, that they should have ten per cent, on whatever might be recovered in a certain chancery suit commenced by them in the year 1834, for their services in the prosecution of it; and if nothing should be recovered in it, then no compensation for their said services” in attending before the commissioners to take accounts, or in court, or in taking depositions in the same. It was held that such a contract is not champertous, or of immoral tendency. The court saying of this contract as to its savoring of maintenance and champerty, it will be only necessary to define maintenance and champerty, and refer to the contract set out in the bill of exceptions, in order to show that there is not a feature in this contract that bears the slightest resemblance to champerty or maintenance ; [314]*314citing Lord Abinger as saying in Tindall v. Parker, 11 M. and W., 695, that “the law of maintenance, as I understand it, upon the modern construction, is confined to cases where a man improperly, and for the purpose of stirring up litigation and strife encourages others either to bring actions or to make defenses ‘which they have no right to make;’ and champerty is defined to be an agreement to share in the fruits of maintenance. 7 Bingham, 369, per Tindall, C.

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Bluebook (online)
82 Va. 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nickels-v-kanes-admr-va-1886.