Opinion
November, 1905.
George D. Beattys, for the appellant.
Benjamin E. Valentine, respondent, in person.
The defendant as trustee contracted to sell realty. The search by the purchaser disclosed a lis pendens filed in 1887 in an action for partition. This plaintiff was the attorney of record for the plaintiff in the partition action. No order of discontinuance had ever been entered. When the plaintiff was approached on the subject of removing the objections of the purchaser, he asserted certain equitable claims against the premises, founded upon services in various litigations. As the result of negotiation an agreement was executed on February 8, 1902, between the plaintiff, the trustee, and the cestuis que trustent, to the end that the objections of the purchaser might be obviated, the realty be conveyed and the plaintiff be remitted to a fund derived from the purchase price to be deposited in a trust company to the credit of an action between the plaintiff and the trustee. Thereafter an order of discontinuance was entered and a reference ordered upon the claims of the plaintiff. Subsequently the proceedings were stipulated into this action, which was tried before a referee who gave judgment for the defendant save in one respect. The plaintiff claimed $1,000 compensation for his legal services in the partition action. The referee decided that the claim was embraced in a certain item of $1,000 which was barred by the Statute of Limitations, but he also decided that the plaintiff was entitled to costs and an extra allowance in the partition action, and accordingly gave judgment for $540 and costs. The plaintiff does not appeal. The defendant appeals only from that portion which awards the said $540. The sole question is whether this part of the judgment is right. The ground for the decision of the learned referee is stated in his elaborate opinion as follows:
"But although I am satisfied that the item of $1,000 claimed against Mrs. Mary A. Wood, included the plaintiff's charge for services in the Carrie M. Wood partition action, and that that claim is barred by the statute, yet in view of the order of the court dated February 15, 1902, made in a proceeding to secure a discontinuance of that action, and in which the application was granted `without prejudice to any claims of plaintiff's attorney for costs, allowance and compensation for services in respect to the subject matter, for the determination of which matters alone jurisdiction of this action is to be further retained by the court with like effect as if a judgment had been this day entered instead of a discontinuance,' and I was appointed referee `to take proof and report the same to the court with my opinion thereon as to what amount as costs, allowance and fees as attorney and counsel said plaintiff's attorney should be awarded,' and of the stipulation entered into on the trial of this action that that proceeding `be merged in the present action, and that the issues in that proceeding be deemed a part of the issues in this action,' I think that the plaintiff is entitled to the taxable costs and a reasonable allowance in that action, since he certainly would have been awarded such costs and allowance on the entry at the present time of a judgment such as the court contemplates."
I do not concur in this view. The purpose of the agreement of February 8, 1902, was but to remove the obstacles in the way of a conveyance of the realty and to remit the plaintiff to a fund. It provided, it is true, that out of such amount should be paid, first, "all costs, allowances and compensation which may be awarded to said Valentine in said partition action, or by the court in such action as may be instituted between said Valentine and said Stevens, trustee, to determine the amount thereof." But I think that the parties did not intend to secure to the plaintiff anything more than he could establish by his evidence. Indeed, the final clause of the agreement reads: "Nothing in this instrument shall be considered as an admission by any of the undersigned (excluding said Valentine) as to the validity of the claims of said Valentine or of the amount thereof." The expression "costs, allowances and compensation" is a familiar term commonly used to describe the charge of an attorney, both as fixed by statute and also by agreement or by proof upon a quantum meruit. The order of discontinuance of February 15, 1902, provided that it was made without prejudice to " any claims of plaintiff's attorney for costs, allowance and compensation for services in respect to the subject matter." This provision did not assure nor purport to assure to the plaintiff that he was entitled to costs or allowance or compensation. The order then provided "for the determination of which matters alone, jurisdiction of this action is to be further retained by the court with like effect as if a judgment had been this day entered instead of a discontinuance." It seems to me that this provision was simply to keep the action alive in order that, notwithstanding the discontinuance, a reference might be had in that action to determine the claim of the plaintiff, whatever it might be. The discontinuance, in other words, was limited until the claim of the plaintiff for legal services in that action was determined by a reference in that action. The expression, "with like effect as if a judgment had been this day entered," is to offset the previous general provision for a discontinance, and did not and was not intended to operate as an adjudication that the plaintiff was entitled to costs and an allowance irrespective of his right thereto as it might be proved or disproved in the proceedings. In other words, this provision did not assure the plaintiff costs and allowances absolutely and in any event. A judgment can be entered without costs and without an allowance if the parties so provide. On the trial the plaintiff read in evidence the agreement of December, 1887, whereby, among other matters, the discontinuance of this action was provided for. A provision therein read: "Each party is to pay their own costs in all litigations now pending and to be discontinued." There is no proof whatever that this agreement was ever annulled, rescinded or modified. There is no proof that any steps of any kind were ever taken in the action thereafter. But a formal order was never entered and the lis pendens was never canceled. But so far as the fact of discontinuance was concerned, a formal order therefor was not necessary. ( Hempy v. Griess, 30 App. Div. 434.) "After an action has been discontinued by a party it should not be again restored unless the order was obtained by fraud." ( Smith v. Green, 14 Hun, 529.) I think that the court did not intend and, in fact, did not by the provision as to judgment, restore the action so as to nullify the formal agreement for a discontinuance, but merely inserted the provision that the action might live so far as was necessary to carry the reference therein provided for. Otherwise there would be the anomaly of a reference at the foot of a discontinuance. And I think that upon the record the agreement or stipulation fixed and determined the right of the plaintiff to any costs or allowances in the partition action adversely to him.
Such was the view of the plaintiff. For it appears from the record on the appeal from the order in this case ( Valentine v. Stevens, 86 App. Div. 481) that the plaintiff, with reference to this very order of the court, deposed: "It will be seen by reference to said order that it was made without prejudice to the claims of deponent, as attorney for costs, allowance and compensation for services. It appearing subsequently that no costs or allowances were to be collected by either party as against the other the question of costs and allowances (on which deponent could have had a lien only) became entirely superfluous and immaterial and the question was one only of compensation between deponent and his client, the plaintiff in the partition action." And the learned plaintiff in his printed points argued to this court that "the fact that the referee used the words costs and allowances in connection with the word `fees' is mere surplusage. * * * It was clear that he intended to decide, and did decide, only how much compensation plaintiff had earned in the partition action. That was all he could decide as to this claim in either action. As the parties to the partition action had stipulated neither should have costs as against the other, * * * there could be no claim of plaintiff to be enforced against defendants in the partition action by lien on the costs; and the word compensation covered the whole matter."
The judgment so far as appealed from is reversed and a new trial ordered, costs to abide the final award of costs, upon the issue of the right of the plaintiff to receive any costs or allowances for services in the partition suit.
HIRSCHBERG, P.J., BARTLETT, RICH and MILLER, JJ., concurred.
Judgment so far as appealed from reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the final award of costs, upon the issue of the right of the plaintiff to receive any costs or allowances for services in the partition suit.