Kellam, J. PThis was an appeal from a judgment rendered by the late district court of Hyde county. The notice of appeal was signed by “D. A. W. PeUdns, T. E. Price, and Kirke W. Wheeler, attorneys for defendant.” On the 5th day of May, 1891, there was presented, in open court, a written stipulation dismissing such appeal, signed by L. E. Whitcher, attorney of record for plaintiff and respondent, and by the official board of said defendant and appellant, and by D. A. W. Perkins, one of said appellant’s attorneys. Upon the filing of such stipulation an order was entered dismissing said appeal. Afterwards, on affidavits, an order was made requiring respondent to show cause why said order of dismissal should not be vacated and *225said appeal reinstated. On the return and hearing of said order to show cause, affidavits were read which tended to show that, upon the institution of the action in the court below, the defendant township had by special contract employed said Perkins and the law firm of Price & Price, of which said T. E. Price was the successor, to defend the same, by the terms of which contract their compensation was to depend upon the final success of their defense; that said Kirke W. Wheeler was after-wards employed either by, or with the knowledge and consent of said township; and that such agreement and stipulation to dismiss the appeal was without the consent, and in prejudice of the rights of, said attorneys. It is urged in support of the claim that the appeal should be reinstated; that, by its discontinuance and dismissal, it is placed beyond the power of appellant’s attorneys to continue their defense, and their opportunity is thus lost to execute their agreement, and thus earn and become entitled to the contingent compensation agreed upon; but a complete answer to such claim is that the appellant township could not, by dismissal of the appeal, against the consent and protest of their attorneys, change such attorneys’ relation to or rights under their contract. And the manner in which such attorneys must eventually enforce their rights against the township under such contract, if such exist, would not be changed by discontinuance of the appeal. In either case the claim would be an unsecured one, resting upon the personal responsibility of the township. It is not as though the attorneys were to have a lien upon, or to be paid from, a judgment to be obtained, for in that case a settlement might prejudice their opportunity of collecting, by destroying their chance of getting a judgment which was to constitute their security. We think we were right in recognizing the stipulation to dismiss the appeal signed by the appellant and one of its attorneys; and as such dismissal, unconsented to by the attorneys now moving for its reinstatement, could not affect the rights of such attorneys under the alleged contract, or deny or take away any security they would otherwise have had, for its enforcement, we overrule the motion to reinstate the appeal, without costs, except the fees of the clerk on this motion to be taxed against the appellant.
All the judges concurring,