Shepherd, Hooper & Co. v. Crawford
This text of 71 Ga. 458 (Shepherd, Hooper & Co. v. Crawford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The plaintiffs instituted suit against the defendant, as executor do son tort of Michael J. Crawford, deceased, and set forth in their declaration that they had employed deceased, in his lifetime, as an attorney at law, to collect a claim by note made to them by one Gilliam. This note was due in 1874; that deceased had collected the same, and failed to account to them for the amount. On the trial, they proved the execution of the receipt of deceased for [459]*459the note, and gave it in evidence; they also proved by Gilliam that he had paid the same to deceased. Defendant objected to the testimony of Gilliam, because his testator, the other party to the transaction, was dead, and because he was the attorney both for the plaintiffs and Gilliam in this transaction; this objection was overruled. Plaintiffs having closed their testimony, defendant moved to non-suit them, which motion was sustained, but upon what ground does not distinctly appear from the record or the judgment of the court awarding the non suit. To this judgment the plaintiffs excepted, and bring the same here by writ of error and bill of exceptions.
It is said in argument here, that the non-suit was awarded because the evidence failed to show that M. J. Crawford, in his lifetime, and the defendant since his death, had not paid over the sum collected for plaintiffs; and because it was neither alleged nor proved that a special demand for the money thus collected had been made either upon the deceased or, since his death, upon the defendant, prior to the institution of the present action.
Upon neither of these grounds, nor upon any other that occurs to us, can this judgment of non-suit be sustained. No demand is necessary to the commencement of an action, except in such cases as the law or the contract prescribes. Code, §3255. It is not intimated that the terms of this contract prescribe such a condition, and we are equally well satisfied that the law requires none.
It is the duty of an attorney at law, when he collects money for a client, to pay it over promptly, and if he fails [460]*460to do so, he is liable to a rule, and when a judgment is obtained against him for such default, and he fails to satisfy it within ten days from the time appointed in the order, he is to be removed from the profession. Code, §418, sub-seo. 2. If an attorney at law fails, upon application, to pay to his client any money he may have in hand, collected by virtue of his office, he may be served with a written demand for the same, and if it is not then paid,.he can be compelled to pay at the rate of twenty per centum per annum upon the sum he has in his hands, from the date of the demand, unless good cause can be shown to the contrary. Code, §3950. If" the penalty of twenty per cent for withholding payment is exacted, then a.demand to secure that object is requisite, but no demand is necessary to sustain a suit to compel an account for the money actually collected. 56 Ga., 571-576; 57 Ib., 525-528.
The decision of the court excepted to by the defendant is affirmed. The non-suit awarded in the case, and excepted to by the plaintiffs, was error, and that judgment is reversed.
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