Peyton v. Margiotti

156 A.2d 865, 398 Pa. 86, 1959 Pa. LEXIS 411
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 30, 1959
DocketAppeals, 159 and 166
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 156 A.2d 865 (Peyton v. Margiotti) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peyton v. Margiotti, 156 A.2d 865, 398 Pa. 86, 1959 Pa. LEXIS 411 (Pa. 1959).

Opinions

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Bok,

In 1947 Charles J. Margiotti, Esquire, defended Charles Peyton against a charge of felonious homicide. The result was a conviction of murder in the second degree, which, with a recommendation of mercy, led Chief Justice Maxey to remark at the end of his opinion of affirmance, at 360 Pa. 441 (1948), that Peyton’s escape from a worse fate “cannot be attributed to any weakness in the Commonwealth’s case.” The ensuing sentence was from ten to twenty years in the penitentiary.

For his services Margiotti received $13,580, including a payment of $5000 which is the subject of the instant suit, and spent $4209 in costs.

In 1954 Peyton’s brother Edward read in the paper that the Pardon Board had agreed to release Charles. On September 27th he met his nephew, the plaintiff, who had a certified check from his savings and loan association for $5000, and together they went to Margiotti’s office. Edward Peyton’s name is on the back of the check, together with that of plaintiff’s counsel, because Margiotti refused to take the check, even in escrow, and plaintiff had to go out and, with proper identification, have it cashed. The money was then given to Margiotti, who agreed that Peyton would get it back if his brother was not released from prison by [89]*89Christmas. Margiotti took the money, left his office, and shortly after his return a girl came in with a receipt reading: “Received of Thomas Peyton $5000., acct. services trial and Pardon Board Com. v. Peyton.” It was signed with Margiotti’s firm name, by Florinda R. Sirianni, bookkeeper, and handed to Thomas Peyton.

Margiotti had successfully argued the case before the Pardon Board, and all that stood between Charles Peyton and freedom was the Governor’s signature. The Governor, however, withheld it and Peyton remained in prison not only over Christmas but for some time thereafter. In 1955 the family both wrote and visited Margiotti and demanded return of the money according to the oral contract, since their father had not been released by Christmas, but were refused. Margiotti died in 1956 and plaintiffs brought suit against his Estate. The jury found in their favor for the full amount and interest. The defense was that Margiotti had been underpaid and that the $5000 was an unequivocal fee.

Defendant’s main point is that the contract was contingent and against public policy. We agree that it was, since it was more than a straight bargain for hiring a lawyer to make an argument. Although raised first before the court en banc below, this question must be considered whether raised then or now: Waychoff v. Waychoff, 309 Pa. 300 (1932), 163 A. 670.

Contingent fees, whether in civil or criminal cases, are a special concern of the law. A proper fee in a civil suit, where the client is not taken advantage of, is valid: Klauder v. Cregar, 327 Pa. 1 (1937), 192 A. 667. Such fee contracts are specially dealt with in Procedural Rule 202 and must be in writing, duplicate, and kept for two years, subject to inspection. And the Restatement, Contracts, Section 542, declares them illegal if it is also part of the bargain that the party [90]*90seeking to enforce the claim shall pay the expenses or the owner of the claim shall not settle or discharge it.

In criminal cases the rule is stricter because of the danger of corrupting justice. The second part of Section 542 of the Restatement reads: “A bargain to conduct a criminal case or a proceeding for divorce or annulment of marriage in consideration of a promise of a fee contingent on success is illegal, but a bargain to endeavor to enforce by litigation or otherwise any other kind of claim in consideration of such a promise is not, because of that single fact, illegal.”

Sections 559 to 568 of the Restatement proscribe bargains to influence public officials or public action, and Section 561 deals as follows with securing a pardon: “A bargain to procure a pardon or to solicit by personal influence the granting of a pardon, is illegal; but a bargain to prepare a petition for a pardon and to make an argument in support of it before the pardoning power, is not illegal.”

As for the cases on the subject, we do not think that the law has been better stated since Hatzfield v. Gulden, 7 Watts 152 (1838), when this Court was under the Chief Justiceship of the great Gibson. Justice Huston said, in the good language of the day, that “the proof in the cause was various, and not a little of it,” and it involved a contract to procure signatures to a petition to the governor for a pardon. He said: “The power to pardon may be considered as a part of the penal code for the state; it operates after trial to be sure, generally; but may be exercised before. It is as important that it should be free from bias, or prejudice, or crime, as that the trial should be so. No man would say, that if it were possible to procure a pardon by direct payment to a governor, it would be lawful to give one. To bribe others to deceive and impose on him, only differs in degree. ... all contracts to change the course of trials, or the effects of trials, whether to [91]*91obtain a liberation of a prisoner by money to the jailer, or to obtain a pardon by the use of money, directly or indirectly, must be void.”

No other case deals directly with the pardoning or commuting power, but the analogy of a bargain to obtain legislation is apt. In Clippinger v. Hepbaugh, 5 W. & S. 315 (1843), Justice Rogers said that “a contract to procure the passage of an Act of the Legislature, by any sinister means, or even by using personal influence with the members, would be void, as being inconsistent with public policy and the integrity of our political institutions.” This case and others were cited to the same effect in Spalding v. Ewing, 149 Pa. 375 (1892), 24 A. 219, 15 L.R.A. 727, 34 Am. St. Rep. 608.

Directly in point is Bowman v. Coffroth, 59 Pa. 19 (1868), where the effort was to have a man discharged from the draft. Justice Read said: “The cases cited by the defendant in his paperbook, to which may be added Marshall v. Ohio Railroad Company, 16 Howard 314, establish that a contract to procure a pardon from the governor of a convict would now be held illegal whether improper means were used or not; so to procure the passage of a private statute, or to procure an appointment to office by private influence, or to purchase the right of administration, are all held to be illegal and void.

“In principle it is difficult to perceive any material distinction between these cases and the one before us, which is an application in person to the war department for the discharge of a drafted man, and for which if successful a contingent compensation is to be paid. It is more consistent with morality and sound policy to consider it covered by the rule established in similar cases, and we therefore hold it illegal and void.”

In Kuhn v. Buhl, 251 Pa. 348 (1916), 96 A. 977, we said: “ ‘Whether a contract is against public policy is a question of law for the court to determine from [92]*92all of the circumstances in each case.’ ” We have no hesitation in declaring that an agreement between an attorney and a layman that is wholly contingent upon the success of a petition for commutation is against public policy.

But the lav/ would fall short if it only left the parties where it found them. These parties were not equal, and the maturity of the law has evolved a qualification in the Hatzfield

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156 A.2d 865, 398 Pa. 86, 1959 Pa. LEXIS 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peyton-v-margiotti-pa-1959.