Opinion
(Spring Term, 1800.)
If an attorney promises his client, during the suit, to indemnify him against the consequences of it, the promise is without consideration, and will not support an action.
This was an action on the case brought by Mitchell against Bell, an attorney in the Superior Court of Law for the District of Halifax, in which the jury, at October Term, 1799, found the following verdict: "We find that the defendant did assume and assess the plaintiff's (245) damages to £ 32 6s 7d, subject to the opinion of the Court on the following case: That in the year 1792 the defendant, as attorney-at-law, instituted a suit on behalf of the present plaintiff, Thomas Mitchell, against Dred Taylor, executor of Henry Taylor, deceased — living William Lancaster, the other executor; that Dred Taylor afterwards died, leaving Hardy Hunt and Henry Hunt his executors; that a scire facias issued at December Court, 1792, against Dred Taylor's executors, and made them parties to the said suit — living William Lancaster, the executor of Henry Taylor — that at the time the scire facias was returned, Bell, the defendant, who was the plaintiff's attorney in the aforesaid suit, promised the plaintiff that in case he was nonsuited, thereby meaning cast or in any way defeated, that he, the said Bell, would pay all costs; that the present plaintiff was cast in the county court of Franklin, as appears by the record filed, and paid costs amounting to the sum of £ 32 6s 7d; and if the law is for the plaintiff, we find for the plaintiff; otherwise, for the defendant."
This case was brought before the Judges at their meeting this term for determination.
The promise in this case, stated to be made by Bell, is founded on no consideration; therefore, I am of opinion the judgment should be entered for defendant.
This action is founded upon an express promise made by the defendant, an attorney, that if the plaintiff should be nonsuited, or cast in the suit, he would reimburse him all the costs.
Were this an action against the defendant for mismanagement of the cause or neglect of duty, it would have been unnecessary to have stated any other consideration than his undertaking the management of the suit. Every attorney receives the trust accompanied with responsibility to his client, for any loss occasioned by his improper conduct; in such a case it might be necessary to examine how far he is liable where the loss arises, rather than error in judgment than from neglect (246) or positive misconduct, and likewise to ascertain under which of these two descriptions the defendant's conduct ought to be classed. But in this case all such inquiries are useless, because if the defendant is liable at all, he is so by virtue of his express promise, which would charge him without regard to the means by which the suit was lost.
As a consideration is indispensably necessary to support every assumpsit, it must be ascertained whether nay exists in the present case; it is not pretended that the plaintiff paid anything at the time of the promise, or that he forewent any advantage or benefit that he might otherwise have had; the only consideration that can be possibly set up is, that he employed the defendant as an attorney, and in that character reposed confidence in him; but can that consideration be connected with this promise? I apprehend not, because it was perfectly past and executed.
All the indemnity legally resulting from such misplaced confidence the plaintiff may enforce in another form of action; but to prevail in this, it ought to be shown that the undertaking of the defendant was in consideration of the plaintiff's employing him. It is true that in some cases an assumpsit will lie, although the consideration is past, if there was a duty before; but in all of them the duty is coextensive with the promise. In this case the duty extended no further than a careful, diligent, and possibly skillful management of the suit; it did not go the length of making compensation to the plaintiff if he failed in his suit at all events, or under any possible circumstances.
This promise was altogether without prejudice to the plaintiff, or benefit to the defendant; the former would have been precisely in the same situation if the promise had never been made; the latter received no new confidence or reward for making it. It is within the idea of nudum pactum most completely. I am therefore of opinion that judgment be entered for defendant.
This undertaking or promise, being wholly (247) without consideration, is void.
Judgment for defendant.
NOTE. — See Sweany v. Hunter, 5 N.C. 180; Johnson v. Johnson, 10 N.C. 556; Hatchell v. Odom, 19 N.C. 302.