Starin v. . Mayor, Etc., of N.Y.

12 N.E. 643, 106 N.Y. 82, 8 N.Y. St. Rep. 637, 61 Sickels 82, 1887 N.Y. LEXIS 861
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 7, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 12 N.E. 643 (Starin v. . Mayor, Etc., of N.Y.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Starin v. . Mayor, Etc., of N.Y., 12 N.E. 643, 106 N.Y. 82, 8 N.Y. St. Rep. 637, 61 Sickels 82, 1887 N.Y. LEXIS 861 (N.Y. 1887).

Opinion

Peckham, J.

The plaintiff sues as assignee of one who was appointed by the excise commissioners of Hew York their attorney to prosecute actions for violations of the excise laws in their county.

He was appointed such attorney in 1858, but only actively commenced his work in 1859, and from then until 1863 his whole time, he says, was taken up in this business, but more actively at the commencement of the season when the board would meet. From 1863, his services were so slight that he did not keep a book and it was not worth making even a memorandum of the amount of costs collected by him. His active work was thus shown to have been included within about the period of four years. The amount of the work done may be thus summarized: He commenced 14,915 actions for violations of the law by selling liquor without a license. The names of the defendants were reported to him from the commissioners of excise, with the dates of the alleged violations, and he then filled in such names and dates in blank summons and complaints which required only such names and dates to make a perfect writ and pleading. Five minutes spent in this business was ample to fill out each case and indorse it, etc. In 8,656 of such actions the defendants appeared, a majority by one attorney, and put in answers which were simply general denials. In 1,054 of these actions judgments were taken by default on application to the court and executions issued thereon. In 1,243 of the actions notices of trial were given and they were placed on the calendar and remained thereon *84 twelve terms, although after the trial of four or five the judges refused to try any more, and none were tried, and the evidence shows pretty conclusively that they were not necessarily on the calendar nor did they require any attention, owing to an understanding that they were not to be moved until a test case had been decided by the Court of Appeals, and they never were moved.

The county paid the disbursements for printing, for county clerk’s and for sheriffs’ fees. The whole sum disbursed by the attorney for clerk hire and every other expense amounted to between $3,000 and $4,000. There was no agreement between the attorney and the board as to compensation. He collected and appropriated to his own use, of costs and penalties in these actions, the sum of $10,000.

This is the character of the services performed by the attorney, and their amount has been thus substantially detailed, and upon this branch there was no contradictory evidence.

The plaintiff to prove their value called six witnesses, one of whom had been one of the commissioners of excise during the time inquired about, and they said that in their opinion, in the absence of any agreement, the attorney was entitled to be compensated at the rate of the statutory costs, and that the number of the cases would not alter their view of the matter in the least; that if it was worth that sum for one case it was for 14,000. One witness seemed to regard the matter much in the same light as if the attorney had discovered a gold mine, and was entitled to the rewards of his good fortune. He thought that if 200 suits were commenced m one day (in the manner above described by the mere filling in of a name and a date in blanks left for that purpose), it was worth $10 in each suit, and therefore, $2,000 a day for that service would be a fair and reasonable charge against the county. He said he looked at the whole thing; “ it would only occur once in his life probably.” At the same time he said, that an attorney capable of doing this business, could probably have been hired by the year for from $1,500 to $2,000. This he subsequently explained by saying he meant *85 one could be hired for that sum, who superaddcd to his clerical ability a sufficient quantity of character to entrust, him. with the charge of the papers in the office — not performing the brain work,” but the mere manufacture of the paper after he had been advised by the counsel in the case. The compensation which this witness would award, including $2,000 per day for the commencement of 200 suits, and $12,000 a month for term fees, for cases on the calendar which required no attention, and other things in like proportion, the witness said he regarded as compensation for the attorney, for “ him for the moments of leisure in his life spent in the acquiring of sufficient knowledge to carry on and conduct a prosecution successfully through.” Another witness who estimated the same amount of $10 for a term fee in each case, which would amount to $12,000 a month, said such amount was in his opinion fair and just even when nothing was done in the causes,'they being simply on the calendar and requiring no watching, so long as he had cases enough to make up such total at the specified sum for each. He said in regard to all the servcies for which he gave an opinion as to their value, that he did not regard them as services which involve the question of ability or professional skill,” and that was the reason he gave the answer he did, which was that services of a skilled nature should be compensated more liberally in the case of an experienced lawyer than another, but that for such "services, as this attorney performed, he would make no difference in th.e compensation so far as regarded any reputable member of the bar. The matter is alluded to only to show what is indeed otherwise perfectly plain, that even in the opinion of at least one of plaintiff’s witnesses the services of the attorney were not of a high grade, certainly, of skilled labor.

The rest of the evidence for the plaintiff is of a like nature, and based upon the same principles and reasoning viz.: that however large might be the difference between the taxable costs in all these cases and the amount for which such services could have been obtained, by making an agree *86 ment with a perfectly reputable and competent attorney in regard to it before hand, yet if that precaution happened to have been neglected such fact was entirely unimportant in forming an opinion as to the value of those services. It is to be gathered that this surprising fact was based upon the belief of the plaintiff’s witnesses that, in the absence of an agreement, the attorney was entitled to be compensated for his services in any and in all cases, no matter how great their number, at the rate of the taxable costs in each case.

The defendants called thirteen witnesses, many of them among the leading members of the bar in Hew York city, and they one and all declared that while in the ordinary run of suits of a not very intricate nature the compensation of an attorney might be reasonably based upon the taxable costs in a case ; yet in their judgment where the cases were of the simplest possible nature, and were of such an enormous number, and the labor involved was so largely reduced to' that of mere machinery, as in the cases under discussion, the compensation under such circumstances at the rate of taxable costs was enormously extravagant, and each one gave his opinion as to the value of such services, taking it as an employment by the year (as the attorney was appointed annually), and also judging of such value by considering it with reference to each suit.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Robert L. Wheeler, Inc. v. Scott
1989 OK 106 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1989)
Harlan v. Weiner
80 Misc. 2d 723 (Civil Court of the City of New York, 1974)
Matter of Tillman
181 N.E. 75 (New York Court of Appeals, 1932)
Matter of Howell
109 N.E. 572 (New York Court of Appeals, 1915)
Earley v. Whitney
106 A.D. 399 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1905)
McIlvaine v. Steinson
90 A.D. 77 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1904)
Barry v. Third Avenue Railroad
87 A.D. 543 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1903)
Cate v. Hutchinson
78 N.W. 500 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1899)
People ex rel. Reynolds v. Common Council of Buffalo
9 Misc. 403 (The Superior Court of New York City, 1894)
People ex rel. Reynolds v. Common Council
61 N.Y. St. Rep. 692 (Superior Court of Buffalo, 1894)
Sackett v. Breen
3 N.Y.S. 473 (New York Supreme Court, 1888)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 N.E. 643, 106 N.Y. 82, 8 N.Y. St. Rep. 637, 61 Sickels 82, 1887 N.Y. LEXIS 861, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/starin-v-mayor-etc-of-ny-ny-1887.