Judges: Scott
Filed Date: 10/15/1902
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
This is an action to enforce an attorney’s lien. The defendant has answered and the plaintiff demurs to two of the defenses pleaded. The defendant not only undertakes to sustain its answer, but, as it has a right to do, attacks the complaint as not stating facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. It is well settled that a demurrer to an answer searches the whole record for the first fault in pleading that is defective in substance. Baxter v. McDonnell, 154 N. Y. 432. The plaintiff alleges that he is the survivor of a firm of lawyers who were attorneys for the defendant McDonald in an action brought against the latter by Henry Youngs and others. In that action a preliminary injunction was obtained restraining McDonald from removing or interfering with certain personal property in a house in the city of New York; this preliminary injunction was continued, the plaintiffs Youngs and others giving an undertaking, upon which the defendant surety company was the surety, to pay any damages that McDonald might sustain by reason of the injunction, if it should finally appear that it was improvidently granted., Upon the trial of the action of Youngs against McDonald, the latter was successful, and the complaint was dismissed, the injunction falling with it. Thereupon the damages suffered by McDonald, by reason of the injunction, were assessed at $2,075, which amount, on appeal, was reduced to $775. McDonald’s taxable costs in the action amounted to $389.94. The plaintiff claims a lien upon the damages thus assessed for his services rendered to McDonald in the action brought by Youngs and others, and sues to establish and enforce such lien. If it shall appear, as the defendant insists, that the plaintiff herein cannot successfully assert a lien upon the damages awarded to his former client, this action must fail, and' it will be unnecessary to consider any other question raised upon the argument of the demurrer. What is commonly known as a charging lien, such as the plaintiff seeks to enforce here, so far as it exists in this State, rests upon the provisions of section 66 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which provides that “ From the commencement of an action or special proceeding, or the service of. an answer containing a counterclaim, the attorney who appears for a party has a lien upon his client’s cause of action, claim or counterclaim, which attaches to a verdict, report, decision, judgment or final order in his client’s favor, and the proceeds thereof in whosesoever hands they may come.” It is well settled that the
Complaint as against defendant surety company dismissed, with costs.