O'CONNELL v. Superior Court

41 P.2d 334, 2 Cal. 2d 418, 97 A.L.R. 918, 1935 Cal. LEXIS 342
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 13, 1935
DocketS. F. 15245
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 41 P.2d 334 (O'CONNELL v. Superior Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'CONNELL v. Superior Court, 41 P.2d 334, 2 Cal. 2d 418, 97 A.L.R. 918, 1935 Cal. LEXIS 342 (Cal. 1935).

Opinion

WASTE, C. J.

This is an application for a writ of mandate to be directed to the respondent superior court and compelling it to grant a motion, duly made, for substitution of attorneys in an action therein pending. The respondent has answered and demurred generally to the petition. Counsel of record in the court below refused to join in a stipulation substituting him out of the case and opposed the motion for substitution of attorneys on the ground that petitioner had theretofore, and in writing, conferred on him an irrevocable agency or power coupled with an interest in the subject-matter of the action. The respondent court obviously agreed with this contention in denying the motion for a substitution.

It appears that in 1923 the petitioner had procured from her then husband, Elmer 0. O’Connell, an assignment of all his “right, title and interest in and to the proceeds of the production of oil, gas and other kindred substances” taken from certain designated real property. Subsequently the parties were divorced. At a later date, petitioner apparently concluded that she had not been receiving all she was entitled to under the terms of said assignment, whereupon she employed Aaron N. Cohen, the attorney here sought to be substituted out, to commence an action looking to the protection of her rights. Accordingly, a complaint was filed, naming as defendants the petitioner’s divorced husband and an oil company, wherein it is alleged that said individual defendant, in violation,of petitioner’s rights under the assignment above referred to, had received from the corporate defendant proceeds from the production of oil, gas and other kindred substances, in an amount of $66,911.42. The complaint concludes with a prayer for judgment in that amount and for an adjudication that petitioner is entitled to receive all other of such proceeds as may hereafter accrue.

At the time of employing said attorney, and prior to the filing of the complaint, petitioner and counsel entered into the written agreement giving rise to this proceeding. It reads:

*421 “San Francisco, California, “December 10, 1930.
“I, Merle P. O’Connell, hereby employ Aaron N. Cohen as my attorney to proceed against Elmer O. 0 ’Connell in the matter of the correction of an erroneously drawn assignment.
“I agree to pay my said attorney one-half (1-2) of all that he may collect or recover by suit or compromise, and I give him full power to compromise.
“I hereby assign to my said attorney as his compensation one-half (1-2) of my interest, whatever that interest is now or may become, under that certain assignment recorded in Book 2534, at page 70, of Official Records in the office of the County Recorder in Los Angeles County, California.
“I agree that said attorney may abandon said employment at any time by waiving compensation for his services till then performed in said matter.
“Merle P. O’Connell.
“I accept the above employment on the above terms.
“Aaron N. Cohen.”

Section 284 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that the attorney in an action or special proceeding may be changed at any time upon consent of both client and attorney or upon the order of the court upon the application of either client or attorney, after notice from one to the other. By virtue of this code section, it is now settled in this state that in the absence of any relation of the attorney to the subject-matter of the action, other than that arising from his employment, the client has the absolute right to change his attorney at any stage in the action and the fact that the attorney has rendered valuable services under his employment, or that the client is indebted to him therefor, or for moneys advanced in the prosecution or defense of the action, does not deprive the client of this right. (Gage v. Atwater, 136 Cal. 170 [68 Pac. 581].) In the event his discharge is improper or without just cause, adequate remedies are available to the attorney by which he may seek reimbursement for such services and outlays on behalf of the client. (Kirk v. Culley, 202 Cal. 501, [261 Pac. 994].)

However, to the rule that a client may discharge his attorney at any time, there is a well-recognized exception where the attorney has an interest in the subject-matter of the litigation. (Todd v. Superior Court, 181 Cal. 406, 413 *422 [184 Pac. 684, 7 A. L. R. 938]; Kirk v. Culley, supra, 505; Kelly v. Smith, 204 Cal. 496, 500 [268 Pac. 1057] ; Scott v. Superior Court, 205 Cal. 525, 531, 532 [271 Pac. 906]; Atchison v. Hulse, 107 Cal. App. 640, 644 [290 Pac. 916].) The leading definition of the character of “interest” essential, when coupled with a power, to make the latter irrevocable, appears in the early and leading case of Hunt v. Rousmanier, 8 Wheat. (21 U. S.) 174, 203 [5 L. Ed. 589], wherein, Chief Justice Marshall writing the opinion, it is declared: “Is it an interest in the subject on which the power is to be exercised or is it an interest in that which is produced by the exercise of the power f We hold it to be clear, that the interest which can protect a power, after the death of a person who creates it, must be an interest in the thing itself. In other words, the power must be engrafted on an estate in the thing. The words themselves would seem to import this meaning. ‘A power coupled with an interest, ’ is a power which accompanies, or is connected with, an interest. The power and the interest are united in the same person. But, if we are to understand by the word ‘interest’ an interest in that which is to be produced by the exercise of the power, then they are never united. The power, to produce the interest, must be exercised, and by its exercise, is extinguished. The power ceases, when the interest commences, and therefore, cannot, in accurate law language, be said to be ‘coupled’ with it.” This definition has been generally recognized and accepted and has received the unqualified approval of this court. (McColgan v. Bank of California Assn., 208 Cal. 329, 335 [281 Pac. 381, 65 A. L. R. 1075]; Kunz v. Anglo & L. P. Nat. Bank, 214 Cal. 341, 344 [5 Pac. (2d) 417]; Capital Nat. Bank v. Stoll, 220 Cal. 260, 264 [30 Pac. (2d) 411].) The decisions agree that for a power to be coupled with an interest, so as to be irrevocable, there must be a specific, present and coexisting interest in the subject of the power or agency. Whether such an interest exists in any particular ease is to be determined from the entire agreement between the parties. (Todd v. Superior Court, supra, 418.) In the cited case the agreement between the parties though purporting to “assign” all of the subject of the power to the attorney-in-fact, and expressly declaring it to be the intention of the constituents to thereby create a power of *423

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Bluebook (online)
41 P.2d 334, 2 Cal. 2d 418, 97 A.L.R. 918, 1935 Cal. LEXIS 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oconnell-v-superior-court-cal-1935.