Spinks v. Davis

32 Miss. 152
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 32 Miss. 152 (Spinks v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spinks v. Davis, 32 Miss. 152 (Mich. 1856).

Opinion

Hakdy, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

[154]*154The declaration in this case states in substance, that the plaintiff contracted with and retained the defendant as an attorney-at-law, to collect certain claims to a large ardount, due him from the estate of one John Carson, deceased, who resided in Alabama, and died insolvent, but was entitled to a distributive share of the estate of his father William Carson, who had previously died in Talla-hatchie county, in this State; that the said estate having been fully administered and distribution made, and no distributive share set apart or allowed to John Carson, and the plaintiff being advised, that in order to reach John’s interest -in his father’s estate, it would be necessary to take out letters of administration of John’s estate and proceed against the administrators of the father’s estate, contracted with and retained the defendant as an attorney, to take out letters of administration upon John’s estate, and to collect his debt, for certain reasonable fees and reward to be paid to him; that the defendant accordingly took out letters of administration in the Tallahatchie Probate Court, at June term, 1856, and in conjunction with other counsel retained with the defendant, the defendant' as such administrator, filed a billin chancery against the distributees of William Carson’s estate, and obtained a decree in his favor at October term, 1850, from which an appeal was taken by the adverse parties, to this court; that pending that appeal, the defendant, without notice to the plaintiff or his associate attorney, fraudulently stated to this court, that the suit was commenced and prosecuted without his knowledge or consent, whereupon^this court, considering that admission as a confession of errors, and without examining the merits of the case, reversed the decree; and the same statement being afterwards made to the Chancery Court, the bill was finally dismissed by that court, at April term, 1853. The declaration avers, that the plaintiff’s debt could have been collected, but that it was prevented by the fraudulent conduct of the defendant; wherefore, he prays judgment against the defendant in his individual capacity for his debt, &c.

The defendant demurred to this declaration upon many grounds, and judgment was rendered thereupon for the defendant; and for this alleged error, the case is brought here.

[155]*155We will proceed to consider tbe correctness of tbe judgment upon tbe most essential point of tbe demurrer.

Tbe first objection to tbe declaration is, that tbe contract set up is contrary to public policy, and, therefore, illegal and void.

This agreement as stated is, in substance, that tbe defendant wbo was thus retained as the attorney of the plaintiff, to collect his debt, for compensation, should also become administrator of tbe debtor’s estate, and thereby accomplish tbe object of bis original engagement and collect tbe debt. Tbe question is, do not these respective duties involve incompatible obligations, or, does not tbe faithful performance of one of them tend necessarily to tbe violation of the other ?

It was tbe duty of tbe attorney diligently to prosecute tbe claim according to law, and to collect it if it could be done by legal means. It was tbe duty of tbe administrator to scrutinize tbe claim rigidly, and to refuse payment if there was any doubt about its justness in fact, or its validity according to strict legal rules; to defend, upon tbe ground of tbe Statute of Limitations, tbe illegality or want of consideration of tbe claim, or any other bar which was a sufficient defence to it in law. And all such de-fences, it was tbe plain duty of tbe attorney to resist. In short, tbe attorney was bound to protect tbe interest of bis client, and tbe administrator was primarily bound to protect tbe legal interests of the estate. Under such circumstances, tbe attorney could not have performed bis duty to prosecute tbe claim, if its validity bad been doubtful, consistently with bis duty to defend tbe estate against its collection. Hence, a strong temptation would necessarily arise to violate bis duty in tbe latter capacity, and to pay the claim; because tbe attorney would thereby make a profit by bis retainer in addition to tbe commission which be would at all events receive as administrator; and instead of acting as a faithful and impartial administrator, be stands under a strong temptation to abuse bis trust to bis own private gain. If tbe claim should be of such doubtful validity as to make it the duty of the administrator to resist its payment and to render a suit necessary, what is bis attitude ? He must either become tbe plaintiff’s attorney in tbe suit against himself as administrator, or be must procure some [156]*156one else to bring the suit against him. In this, there would be an almost irresistible inducement to malpractice and collusion; for, considering the infirmities of human nature, it is scarcely to be supposed, that he would make a very vigorous defence to a suit in which he was directly interested that the plaintiff should recover.

But in this case, the main object of the arrangement was the collection of the plaintiff’s claim, and to that the defendant was primarily bound by his agreement. The administration was to be undertaken merely as a means to that end. How, then, could the attorney properly perform his contract to collect the plaintiff’s claim, when it might become his duty as administrator to resist it ? Either by the force of his contract, and in furtherance of the object of the undertaking, or by the temptation to do wrong which his situation would render almost irresistible, he must act as administrator so as to facilitate the end for which the whole arrangement was entered into, and thereby violate his duty in that capacity.

The obligations are, therefore, manifestly inconsistent, and are calculated to induce a violation of one of two high public duties; and the agreement must therefore be condemned as illegal and against public policy, so far as it charged the attorney, upon his individual undertaking, to collect the claim by means of the administration.

It is no answer to this view of the case to say, that the defendant might properly have performed his duty generally, as administrator, as well to others interested as to the plaintiff, and yet have properly paid the claim of the plaintiff; and that it is to be presumed that the arrangement was intended to be carried out by legal means, and not by those which were illegal. It is a sufficient objection to a contract, on the ground of public policy, that it has a direct tendency to induce fraud and malpractice upon the rights of others, or the violation or neglect of high public duties. Upon this principle, contracts to procure the making of a will in favor of a particular party, or to bring about a marriage between certain parties, and the like, are held to be illegal as being against public policy. For although the act contracted to be done may be just and beneficial as between the parties immediately concerned [157]*157in it, and though it be accomplished in good faith and without undue means, yet the contract to procure it to be done is held to be against public policy, because its natural effect is to cause the party to abuse the confidence placed in him by those upon whom the influence is to be exerted, and thereby prejudicially to affect the rights of others. Fuller v. Dame, 18 Pick. 472; Collins v. Blantern, 2 Wilson, 347; 1 Story, Eq. §§ 265, 266; Chitty on Contracts, 525, 526; 1 Lead. Cases in Eq.

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Bluebook (online)
32 Miss. 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spinks-v-davis-miss-1856.