Williams v. . Ingersoll

89 N.Y. 508, 1882 N.Y. LEXIS 251
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 10, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by198 cases

This text of 89 N.Y. 508 (Williams v. . Ingersoll) 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
Williams v. . Ingersoll, 89 N.Y. 508, 1882 N.Y. LEXIS 251 (N.Y. 1882).

Opinion

Earl, J.

The plaintiffs were attorneys and counselors at law, practicing their profession in the city of Hew York. During several years before the commencement of this action the defendant Heath was extensively involved in litigation with the defendants Ingersoll and with other parties. He became a party to many legal proceedings and actions in all of which one of the plaintiffs was either his attorney or counsel. One of the actions was brought by Heath against the Ingersolls to recover damages for malicious prosecution. All the proceedings and actions were finally, by agreement of all the parties, submitted to an arbitrator, who after hearing all the parties made his award in and by which, among other things, he awarded to Heath against the Ingersolls for damages on account of the malicious prosecution the sum of $10,000. During the progress of the litigation, the plaintiffs, feeling uneasy about their compensation for the services which they were rendering, and were expected to render for Heath in the various actions, made an oral agreement with him, which is alleged in the complaint, and found by the trial judge as follows : “ That the plaintiffs should be paid for their said services out of any moneys that the said Heath should obtain or become entitled to from any of the matters, suits and proceedings in which they should be engaged ;” and that they should have a lien for all sums • that might he owing or due them for their said services, and for the services of each of them, and for the services of the attorneys employed by them to the extent of the worth and value thereof *516 upon any sum he might obtain or become entitled to from the said defendants Lorin and James H. Ingersoll, or from any other person or party connected with said suits, matters and proceedings superior to any right the said Heath might have thereto, and which should be paid to them before the said Heath should have or be entitled to receive any part thereof, or right thereto.”

Before the award which has been referred to was made, the defendant Brady recovered a judgment in the Supreme Court of this State against Heath for upwards of $7, 000, and that judgment was assigned to the defendant Ivins. On the 28th j day of October, 1878, two days before the time fixed by the award for the payment of the $10, 000 to Heath, Ivins brought an action in the Supreme Court of Connecticut, in Middlesex county, against Heath upon the judgment recovered against him by Brady, and on the same day sued out an attachment thereon, and the sheriff of Middlesex county immediately served the attachment on Lorin Ingersoll, at Portland in Connecticut, where he then resided; and returned the writ with his indorsement thereon that Lorin Ingersoll disclosed an indebtedness on the part of the garnishees to Heath of $10,000. The Ingersolls did not have any knowledge or notice of the lien of the plaintiffs upon the award until after the attachment was served.

On February 18, 1879, Ivins recovered judgment in his action against Heath for upwards of $8,000, and on the 17th day of March, execution was issued on the judgment to the sheriff of Middlesex county, and by him was returned unsatisfied. A scire facias was thereupon issued out of the Connecticut court according to the law and practice of that State against the Ingersolls to compel them to pay the amount of the judgment. On the 23d day of April, 1878, the Ingersolls appeared in the Connecticut court in answer to the scwe facias, and informed that court of the claim of the plaintiffs upon the award.

The court then ordered notice to be given to the plaintiffs of the attachment proceedings that they might appear before it, and substantiate their claim if they saw fit according to the *517 laws of that State, which fully provide for the trial of rival claims to a garnisheed fund. That notice was duly given to the plaintiffs, but they did not appear, and the scire facias is still pending there, and the attachment is still in full force and effect in that State.

This action was commenced on the 16th day of January, 1879, before the recovery in Connecticut of the judgment by Ivins against Heath, and before any thing had been done in the attachment proceeding except the service of the attachment. The plaintiffs claim that the whole amount of the award was due and payable to them by virtue of their agreement with Heath, and this action was brought to enforce their claim to and lien upon the award, and to foreclose and cut off any claim thereon which the defendants Brady and Ivins might have.

It is denied by the defendants, except Heath who suffered default, that the plaintiffs by virtue of any agreement with Heath have any claim to or upon the award which is superior to the claim or lien obtained by Ivins by virtue of the Connecticut attachment proceedings, and this presents the first question for our determination.

There are several obvious reasons for holding that the plaintiffs cannot base their right to recover in this action upon any general lien upon the award which the law gave them as attorneys in the various actions and proceedings which were submitted to the arbitrator. Such a lien would not be a joint lien, and an attorney’s lien is confined to the judgment in the very action in which the compensation was earned for which the lien is claimed. (Phillips v. Stagg, 3 Edw. Ch. 108; St. John v. Diefendorf, 12 Wend. 261; Adams v. Fox, 40 Barb. 442.) The theory upon which the lien is upheld is that the attorney has, by his skill and labor, obtained the judgment, and that hence he should have a lien thereon for his compensation, in analogy to the lien which a mechanic has upon any article which he manufactures. When, therefore, an attorney has several actions, and recovers judgment in but one of them, he cannot, in the absence of a special agreement, have a lien upon that j udgment for his compensation in all the actions.

*518 Nor can the plaintiffs base their claim to an equitable lien upon the award upon the mere • promise of Heath that they should be paid out of any money that should be recovered in any of the actions or proceedings. ' Whatever the law may be elsewhere, it must be regarded as the settled law of this State that an agreement, either by parol or in writing, to pay a debt out of a designated fund does not give an equitable lien upon the fund, or operate as an equitable assignment thereof) fit was so decided in Rogers v. Hosack's Executors (18 Wend. 319.) That ease was followed, and the same rule laid down, in Christmas v. Russell (14 Wall. 69), and Trist v. Child (21 id. 441).

It is contended by the defendants that at the time of the alleged agreement between the plaintiffs and Heath, the claim of the latter which resulted in the award for the $10,000, was for damages on account of a personal tort, and that, therefore, he could not, at that time, assign or create a lien upon the sum which should be subsequently recovered or awarded; and our attention is called to the case of People ex rel. Stanton v. Tioga, C. P. (19 Wend. 73), as an authority for the contention.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 N.Y. 508, 1882 N.Y. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-ingersoll-ny-1882.