Taylor v. Bemiss

110 U.S. 42, 3 S. Ct. 441, 28 L. Ed. 64, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1651
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 7, 1884
Docket164
StatusPublished
Cited by80 cases

This text of 110 U.S. 42 (Taylor v. Bemiss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Bemiss, 110 U.S. 42, 3 S. Ct. 441, 28 L. Ed. 64, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1651 (1884).

Opinion

MR. Justice Mtt.t.er

delivered the opinion of the court.

Laura J. Bemiss, widow of John Bemiss, having a claim against the United States pending before the commission commonly called the Southern Claims Commission, under the act of March 3d, 1871, employed George Taylor and F. C. Wood, attorneys-at-law, residing in Washington city,. to prosecute said claim, and by an instrument in writing agreed to give them fifty per cent, of the amount which might be recovered. The sum recovered was $27,310.00, and, under a power of attorney given by her to Mr. Taylor, he received from the Treasury the sum of $14,598.33, and Mrs. Bemiss the balance of $12,711.67.

The present suit originates in a bill in chancery brought by Belle Bemiss, Elizabeth Bemiss, and Mattie Bemiss, minor children of Mrs.- Bemiss and of her husband, John Bemiss, deceased, to recover of Taylor and Wood and of Mrs. Bemiss, the money thus received.

Mrs. Bemiss makes her answer a cross-bill'against Taylor and Wood, and asserts the invalidity of her. contract with them for compensation, and prays also that' they may be required to .refund the money which they received under it.

To the bill and cross-bill Taylor and Wood answer, under oath (and their answer is in no material matter disproved), that they were employed by Mrs. Bemiss, by a letter written from Louisiana, where she resided, .asking them to accept a retainer in the case, by reason of a suggestion of a friend of hers in Louisiana, and she offered them fifty per cent', of • the amount recovered as their compensation. To this they assented, and enclosed her a contract to that effect, which she signed and returnéd to them. She also executed a power of attorney to them, authorizing them to manage the case and to receive the sum awarded to her. -

The answer further states that, without any suggestion from *44 them, Mrs. Bemiss employed, at different times, two other attorneys in Louisiana, to each of whom she agreed to pay ten per cent, of the amount of the award, and that defendants had advanced to Mrs. Bemiss, pending the litigation, the sum of $800, which, with interest to the time they received the money from the Treasury, ■ was added to the one-half they were entitled to by the terms of the contract. They also paid the ten per cent, out of their share to each of the attorneys employed by her, so that, deducting this twenty per cent., and the money advanced to her and its interest, they received for their compensation only thirty per cent, of the money recovered, or $8,193.00.

It is ur^ed against the validity of this contract of employment that Mrs. Bemiss had no authority to bind her children,the minor heirs, of her deceased husband, by such a contract, and that as to their interest in the award it is void.

The bill of the minor heirs states that Mrs., Bemiss had been appointed by the proper court in Louisiana natural tutrix of these children. We are of opinion that this appointment made it her duty to .take the necessary legal steps to obtain this money from the United'States, and that, whether the suit was brought in her own name or in hers jointly with her children, she was equally bound to prosecute it with diligence, and to do all that was necessary to recover the money. It would be a queer condition of the law if, while it imposed this obligation upon her, it gave her no authority-to employ counsel to prosecute the claim before the only legal tribunal which could allow it; and if she could employ counsel, it follows as a matter of course,' she could make a contract for the amount of their compensation.

This agreement would bind her as tutrix as well as. in her individual right, and it is in both characters she professes to contract.

Such undoubtedly is the law of Louisiana, which must govern as to her powers as tutrix, since it is there she was appointed, and there both she and her children resided when she made the agreement with Taylor and Wood.

Of her authority to make such a contract as tutrix we have no doubt.

*45 Another objection raised is that, since by the act of Congress making the appropriation to pay the money, it is expressly made payable to Mrs. Bemiss and her children by name, her authority as tutrix under the Louisiana appointment did not authorize payment to her in the District of Columbia.

The subject of such payments by the United States to administrators appointed in the States is very fully discussed in \ the case of Wyman v. The United States, decided simultaneously with the present case, 109 U. S., 654, and, upon the principles there laid down, we are of opinion that payment to Mrs. Bemiss as tutrix under the Louisiana appointment is a valid payment, and that she is responsible under that appointment, and the receipt of the money by herself and by her authorized attorney, to these minors if they have been wronged. And this is a matter of accounting with them in her fiduciary character of tutrix.

It remains to be considered whether there is in this contract of employment anything which, after it has been fully executed on both sides, should require it to be declared void, in a'court of equity, and the money received under it returned. It was decided in the case Stanton v. Embrey, 93 U. S. 548, that contracts by attorneys for compensation in prosecuting ;;claims against the United States were not void- because the amount-of it was made contingent upon success, <?r upon the sum recovered. And the well known- difficulties and delays in obtaining payment of just claims which are not within the ordinary course of procedure of the auditing officers of the government, justifies a liberal compensation in successful cases, where none is to be received in ease\of failure.

Any other rule would work much hardship in cases of. creditors of small means residing far from- the seat of government, who can give neither money nor personal attention-to securing-their rights.

This, however, does not remove the suspicion which naturally attaches to such contracts, and where it can be shown that they are obtained from the suitor by any undue influence of the attorney over the client, or by any fraud or imposition, or that the compensation is clearly excessive, so as to amount to *46 extortion, the court will in a proper case protect the party-aggrieved.

While fifty per cent, seems to be more than a fair proportion in the division between client and attorney in an ordinary case, we are not prepared to assume that it is extortionate for that reason alone, and the testimony of the lawyers on that subject, taken as experts, does not justify such a conclusion. In'the case before us, it is beyond dispute that- the attorneys of Mrs. Berniss exercised no influence over her whatever in adjusting the amount of the fee stipulated in the agreement’ They had never known her until this employment, and it was through no suggestion ¡of theirs or any agent of theirs that she applied to them. Her first letter to them on the subject made the offer of fifty per cent., and no more was asked for by them.

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Bluebook (online)
110 U.S. 42, 3 S. Ct. 441, 28 L. Ed. 64, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1651, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-bemiss-scotus-1884.