Smith's Adm'r v. Lamberts

7 Gratt. 138
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedOctober 15, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 7 Gratt. 138 (Smith's Adm'r v. Lamberts) 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
Smith's Adm'r v. Lamberts, 7 Gratt. 138 (Va. 1850).

Opinion

DANIEL, J.

The only question brought before the Court for its decision in this case, is, whether the claim of S. & J. Lambert against the representatives of Dishman has been paid; and its solution depends on the extent of power with which an attorney at law is clothed, who, in the ordinary course, is entrusted by a creditor with a bond, note or other evidence of debt, for suit and collection. Practitioners of the law in this country are generally regarded by the Courts as vested with a larger authority in the control and disposition of demands placed in their hands for collection, than has been usually attributed by the common law to an attorney at law in England. Here the characters of attorney and barrister or counsellor at law, are in most instances blended, and the powers pertaining to this double capacity, are held to be of a wider scope than those belonging to the office of an attorney merely.

*In some of our sister States the rela[62]*62tion of client and attorney has been held to confer upon the latter the authority even to compromise, compound or commute demands of the former confided to him for collection. The general doctrine, however, so far as I have had it in my power to collect it from a review of the decisions, is, that the attorney has no right to commute the debt of his client, to release the person of the debtor when in prison by virtue of a ca. sa., or to enter a retraxit -in a suit, to execute a release, or to do any other act which destroys the cause of .action without receiving payment. But, on the other hand, that he has an extensive control over the remedy, and is vested with a liberal discretion in the use of the means he may deem best adapted to procuring the payment of his client’s debt.

He may accept payment of the debtor, if voluntarily made to him, at any time whilst his powers continue; or he may take such steps as he may think best calculated to procure payment. In the honest exercise of a sound discretion, unless otherwise instructed by his client, he may delay bringing suit, he may consent to continuances of it, after it is brought, during its progress to judgment, and after jugment he may postpone issuing execution; he may elect whether to take one against the person or the lands or goods of the debtor; and if he issues one against the lands’ or goods, he may direct on what property of the debtor it shall be levied; and after levy he may control. the proceedings of the sheriff or other officer having charge of the execution, and may from time to time postpone a sale of the property levied upon.

It has been decided by the Supreme court of the United States, in the case of the Union Bank of Georgetown, v. Geary, S Peters’ R. 99, that an agreement made by an attorney, in whose hands a promissory note was placed for collection, with an endorser, that if the latter would confess judgment and not dispute *his liability, the attorney would immediately proceed to make the money by execution against the drawer, was within the general scope of the attorney’s powers, and binding upon the creditor. And in Silvis v. Ely, 3 Watts & Serg. 420, it was held to be within the power and authority of an attorney to stay the execution upon a judgment in consideration of the promise of a third person to pay the debt; and that such promise was' binding though not made to the plaintiff nor assented to by him at the time.

The subject has been before this Court in several cases. In Hudson v. Johnson, 1 Wash. 10, and Branch v. Burnley, 1 Call 147, it was decided that, in general, payment to an attorney at law of a debt which he is employed to recover, is good on the custom of the country, particularly if he have possession of the evidence of debt. In the case of Smock v. Dade, 5 Rand. 639, it is asserted by the General court as well settled doctrine, that whilst the authority of an attorney does not extend to the commutation of a debt without the client’s assent, his receipt of actual payment is complete protection to the debtor. In that .case the attorney received a portion of the debt in money, a draft at ten days sight, and a bond at four months; and the receipt given by the attorney stipulates that the draft and bond when paid should be, together with the sum paid in money, in full of the executions of the creditor against the debtor. The amount of the draft was paid to the attorney, but there was no evidence to shew that he had ever realized any thing on the bond. In this state of things the Court held that the amount produced by the draft constituted to that extent a good payment, but that the creditor ought not to be charged with the bond; that the Court below ought not therefore to quash an execution which the creditor had issued to-enforce collection, “although it would have been entirely proper if *such motion had been submitted, for the Court to have entered satisfaction” to the extent of the payment made in money and the amount received on the draft.

The decision in Smock v. Dade has been approved by this Court in the case of Wilkinson v. Holloway, 7 Leigh 277. In the last mentioned case it was decided that it was not competent for an attorney employed to. collect a debt, to discount from it a debt he himself owes the debtor, or to take as an absolute payment or satisfaction the debtor’s assignment of a bond of a third person. But the Court at the same time recognize it as well settled doctrine that an attorney at law who has possession of the evidence of debt, or has obtained a judgment for his client, may receive from the debtor payment of the debt; and that the creditor having confided in him, not only to sue, but also to collect and receive the money, is. bound by the payment.

I do not see how we can approve the decision in Smock v. Dade, in regard to so much .of the creditor’s demand as was held to be paid by the proceeds of the draft, and yet consistently decide that the debt in this case has not been satisfied by Brooke’s receipt in actual money of the amount of Coakley’s. note.

It is true there is a difference in the wording of the written receipts given by the attorneys in the two cases, but I cannot perceive any such marked variance in their phraseology as would justify us in saying that the coming of the proceeds of the collateral debts into the hands of the attorney should in one case constitute a payment; but that, in the other, payment could not be predicated of the transaction till such proceeds were handed over by the attorney to his client, the original creditor.

The receipts vary from each other in two-particulars. In Stock v. Dade the signature of the attorney’s name is followed by the , addition of the word “attorney.” In *the case before us there is no such addition. The receipt in Stock v. Dade recites that the draft and bond are, when paid, to be together with the money paid down, “in full of the executions.” [63]*63Here the attorney stipulates that after pay- ’ ing himself his fee and commission, he is ; to apply the balance of the proceeds of Coakley’s note to the credit of S. & J. ¡ Lambert’s judgment. I do not think that Banks by affixing the word attorney to his | signature to the receipt in Smock v. Dade, j gave any plainer indication that in makng the arrangement he was acting as the attorney of the original creditor, than he would have done by simply signing his name without the addition. The character in which he treated was to be gathered from the transaction.

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Higginbotham v. May
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Bluebook (online)
7 Gratt. 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smiths-admr-v-lamberts-va-1850.