Watson v. Motley

75 So. 147, 201 Ala. 25, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 30
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedApril 12, 1917
Docket7 Div. 857.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 75 So. 147 (Watson v. Motley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watson v. Motley, 75 So. 147, 201 Ala. 25, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 30 (Ala. 1917).

Opinion

MAYFIELD, J.

Appellant, as trustee in bankruptcy, sued appellee as an attorney of the bankrupt, seeking to recover money which the attorney collected as the proceeds of a judgment which the bankrupt had recovered as damages and costs in an action of ejectment. The only counts were one for money had and received, and another in trover for conversion of the funds.

The defendant interposed the general issue, and several special pleas setting up the facts under which the money was collected by the defendant and paid over to the bankrupt, except that retained by him as compensation for his services as attorney in procuring the judgment and collecting the proceeds.

Demurrers were interposed, but were overruled, to these special pleas or to most of ■them which are important on this hearing. The plaintiff then filed a special replication to the pleas, to which a demurrer was sustained. Thereupon trial was had by the court without a jury, on an agreed statement of facts, and judgment was rendered for the defendant. Plaintiff, as trustee in bankruptcy, prosecutes this appeal, here assigning errors to rulings on the demurrers as above indicated, and an exception to the judgment rendered.

We are of the opinion that the trial court ruled and found correctly, and we find no. error which will authorize a reversal of the judgment for the defendant. Certain it is that the agreed statement of facts proves the special pleas (or some of them) without dispute, and, this being true, of course the defendant was entitled to a judgment thereon.

[1,2] The burden however, was on the plaintiff to show a right to recover something, under one or the other of the counts, before defendant was required to defend. We find nothing-in this record which would authorize a judgment against this defendant under either count,, or under any other appropriate count. If the proof had showed a conspiracy or a fraud on the part of the bankrupt and his attorney to hinder, delay, or defraud the estate of the bankrupt, and that it was consummated, and that the attorney in consequence had received a part of the funds so diverted from the estate, the attorney might be held, as for the amount so received by him, under the count for money had and received ; or, if the evidence had showed a conversion of funds belonging to the estate, and that defendant had participated in the conversion or was a party thereto, then a recovery might have been had on the count in trover. But no such facts were shown.

The reporter will set out the agreed statement of facts. That statement shows that a bankrupt, after being discharged, brought an action of ejectment to recover an interest which he claimed in lands situated in Perry county, Ala., and that the defendant, as his attorney, brought the action and recovered a judgment as for the lands or an interest therein, together with damages for the detention, and the cost of the lower court and of this court on appeal and the 10 per cent, damages allowed by the statute. This action was resisted and litigated. There was no claim that it was a mere friendly suit, or an attempt to defraud the creditors of the bankrupt or the estate of the bankrupt or the trustee in bankruptcy, there being none at that time. The damages recovered were solely as for a chose in action and sounding in fort, a tort on the part of those claiming the land recovered. Why the lands, or the interest therein was not returned as assets of the bankrupt, or why a similar action was not brought 'by the trustee in bankruptcy before he was discharged, is not made to appear: It may be that the claim oí the bankrupt as to the land was SO' doubtful that the assignee or trustee in. bankruptcy did not desire to bring the action to recover the land or the damages, or it may be that it was the fault or even the fraud of the bankrupt or his attorney that an action was not so brought. Again, it may have been a mistake or an oversight of the bankrupt or of his attorney, or of both. But, whatever the cause may have been, this record does not disclose it.

In the absence of evidence, we should not presume fraud or wrong on the part of the *27 bankrupt, or of his attorney, or of the former trustee in bankruptcy.

After the bankrupt had recovered the land and collected the judgment as for damages, the proceedings in bankruptcy were, it seems, reopened. The land was recovered by the present trustee in bankruptcy, as the property of the bankrupt, and a judgment therefor was affirmed on appeal to this court. Duncan v. Watson, 73 South. 448. 1 That decision, however, is no authority for maintaining this action. That case was brought and maintained on the ground of a fraudulent conveyance of the land by the bankrupt to his wife and to his attorney. Here, as we have said, there is nothing to show fraud on the part of the bankrupt or his attorney. It appears without dispute that the attorney paid over to the bankrupt the money he collected on the judgment, except the part which the bankrupt owed him as for his fees and services in procuring the judgment and collecting the proceeds, as to which the statute gave him a lien — a lien which even the bankrupt court would protect, in the absence of fraud or unfair dealing — and it is admitted that the amount retained by the attorney was reasonable for the services performed. The attorney was employed by the bankrupt to recover the lands, and judgment was recovered. There was then no bankruptcy proceeding pending, nor trustee to bring the action or to employ the attorney. The bankrupt had been discharged, and it was adjudicated by the circuit court of Perry county (and on appeal affirmed by this court) that the plaintiff, the bankrupt himself, was entitled to recover the possession of the land and the damages. This was an adjudication that the money, when collected, was the property of Duncan. No other person at the time judgment was rendered or at the time the money was paid had made any claim thereto. There was therefore no other person to whom the clerk of the court could pay the money collected in satisfaction of the judgment. It was not then known that the bankruptcy proceeding would be reopened by the creditors of the bankrupt, «.s was subsequently done. The law therefore at the time the attorney paid over the money to Duncan, the plaintiff in judgment, would have compelled the attorney to pay it over, and would have compelled Duncan to pay the attorney for his services in procuring the judgment. So far from there having been done anything unlawful, the law would have compelled that which was done; and assuredly doing that which the law would or did compel will not give a right of action against the party who was, or would 1 be, so compelled to act. Surely no duty rested upon the attorney to hold this money until it was ascertained whether or not the bankruptcy proceedings would be reopened, and whether or not, if so reopened, all or. any part of it could be recovered from him by the trustee in bankruptcy, if one was ever appointed. The case must be looked to in the light of the facts as they existed at the time the attorney collected the money and paid it over to his client, and not in the light of facts subsequently created by the creditors of the bankrupt, or by the trustee subsequently appointed. It appears without dispute that the attorney did not have a dollar of the bankrupt’s money when this suit was brought, and that he did not owe him a cent.

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Bluebook (online)
75 So. 147, 201 Ala. 25, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watson-v-motley-ala-1917.