Dent v. Pickens
Dent v. Pickens
Opinion of the Court
This is an appeal from so much of the decree of the circuit court of Barbour county entered in the cause of Dent v. Pickens on the 23rd day of February, 1905, as confirmed and allowed to be retained by A. G. Dayton the sum of $376.97, being the residue of a sum of $1721.21 which had been paid into the hands of said Dayton on th 22nd day of April, 1892, by Commissioner Peck.
In an opinion written in said cause, found in 46 W. Va. 378, at page 393 (33 S. E. 308), in remanding the cause to the circuit court, said court was directed “to refer the cause to a commissioner to ascertain and report what moneys due on the claims assigned by Dever Pickens from the parties mentioned in the amended bills as debtors to him, if any, have been paid since the filing of the first amended bill, by whom and to whom paid, and whether the one thousand dollars of the debt secured by the trust deed made by M. W. and Ledrue Coburn of October 21, 1885, secured to Dever Pickens, and mentioned in the said marriage contract as having been assigned to Mollie Pickens, has been paid to her since the filing of the first amended bill, and whether any or all of such monéys have been paid or not; that the court take proceedings to collect all such money as may not be shown, upon proper and sufficient evidence, to have been paid prior to the filing of the said first amended bill, to be collected from the persons who have since received it, or from the debtors who may not yet have paid what they owe; and that the same, as fast as collected, be applied to the judgment of appellant, until the same is satisfied.” The said sum of $1,721.21 being a part of the moneys referred to in the matters so to be referred to the commissioner and to be applied to plaintiffs judgment as fast as collected. After the case went back the circuit court entered a decree therein on the 23rd of February,
It is further adjudged, ordered and decreed that said A. G. Diayton and said Mollie Pickens do pay to the plaintiff the said sum of $1,000.00, with interest thereon from said 12th day of May, 1892, and the'said sum of $69.24, with interest thereon from said 6th day of June, 1892; that said A. G. Dayton and John J. Davis do pay to the plaintiff the said sum of $125.00,
A partial appeal only therefrom and supersedeas thereto were allowed as follows: “State of West “Virginia: An appeal and supersedeas upon the foregoing petition was allowed as to so much of the decree pronounced on the 23rd day of February, 1905, as requires that A. G. Dayton and Mollie Pickens pay to the plaintiff the sum of $1,000.00, with interest thereon from the 12th day of May, 1892, and the sum of $69.24, with interest thereon from the 6th day of June, 1892, and that said A. G. Dayton and John J. Davis pay to the plaintiff the sum of '$125.00, with interest thereon from the 21st day of May, 1892, and that said A. G. Dayton and John Bassel pay to the plaintiff the sum of $150.00, with interest thereon from the 26th day of May, 1892, in Court, at Charleston, on the 12th day of May, 1905.” Said appeal was decided, as will appear in 59 W. Va. 274. (53 S. E. 154), where it is said at page 161, 53 S. E.: “From the principles and conclusions above stated, it results that A. G. Dayton was liable to the plaintiff for said sums of $69.24, $125, and $150, paid by him to Mollie Pickens, John J. Davis, and John Bassel, respectively; and that, as said parties received it from him with knowledge of the source from which it was derived and all the circumstances above referred
As said Dayton received said sum of $1,000 and paid it to Mollie Pickens before the filing of said second amended bill, he stands in a different situation as to it. It cannot be said that there was any pending suit with reference thereto at the time he received the money, and he, therefore, violated-no duty. Por this reason, the decree should have required Mollie Pickens alone to pay said sum; and, in so far as it requires A. Q-. Dayton and Mollie Pickens to pay to Susan 0. Dent $1,000 with interest thereon from the 12th day of May, 1892, until paid, the same must be reversed and a decree entered here requiring said Mollie Pickens to pay said sum, with interest thereon as aforesaid, to said Susan C. Dent.” It is further said at same page: “A cross-assignment of error is predicated on the refusal of the court to require the defendant, A. G-. Dayton to pay over to the plaintiff a balance of the Coburn debt, amounting to $376.97, part of which he retained on account of his fees as attorney for Dever Pickens, and the residue of which he applied on costs due from his client. That matter is not now before this Court, for the reasons assigned in disposing of other assignments of error as to matters not brought up by the appeal.”
Susan C. Dent then filed her petition for an appeal from so much of said decree of Pebruary 23, 1905, as permitted and authorized the defendant Dayton to retain as and for Iris attorney’s lien on said original debt, the $376.97, residue of said sum of $1,721.21. The sum here involved, the item of $376.97, for the reasons given in Dent v. Pickens, 53 S. E. 154, fixing liability of said A. G. Dayton for the said sums of $69.24,'$125, and $150, being governed by the same principles should have been required by said decree to be paid by the said Dayton tó the plaintiff Dent, and, as shown by said report of the case in 53 S. E., the said decree of Pebruary 23, 1905, as to said sum of $376.97 could not be reversed on cross-assignment of error in that case because the same was not before the Court therein on said appeal.
Por the reasons stated the said decree of Pebruary 23, 1905} disposing of the said sum of $376.97 is reversed and annulled and this Court proceeding to render such decree as the circuit court should have rendered, it is adjudged, ordered and decreed
070rehearing
ON RE-HEARING.
The money retained by appellee on account of his services as attorney for Dever Pickens stands on no higher footing in respect to the claim of Susan Dent-Roy than any other portion of the M. W. & Ledrue Coburn debt; and in the former appeals in this suit the disbursements of all the rest of said Coburn debt have been held to be in fraud of Susan Dent’s claim. What right has appellee to his fee as attorney for Dever Pickens, payable out of said fund, superior to the right of his associate counsel? Pickens and his wife assigned $1,000.00 of this Coburn debt for the joint benefit of all three of the attorneys.
Counsel for appellee contends, in his brief, that this Coburn. fund was subject to an attorney’s lien in favor of appellee for services rendered by him in respect to the collection of said fund,- before Susan Dent acquired any right to any part of it. If this is true, his lien ought to be protected and saved to him, provided the amount of it can be ascertained. But by reference to his answer we find that he does not assert any such lien. He therein expressly claims title to the fund because of an agreement between himself and Dever' Pickens that he, Bassel and Davis were to be paid their fees out of it for their services in defending the Dent vs Pickens law action. In his .deposition he says: “When the original law cause of Dent vs. Pickens was instituted, and if I remember rightly in less than a week after the summons issued in it, Dever Pickens employed John J. Davis, John Bassel and myself to defend him in it, and in the conversation which I had with him at that time we verbally assigned, or agreed that I should hold to the extent of $1000 this debt this Coburn debt when collected by me, to secure to Davis, Bassel and myself our fees incurred in the defence of this action at law against him.” And later he took a written assignment, dated August 20,. 1889, from Dever Pickens and Minnie Pickens his wife, which reads as follows: “Por the purpose of securing to John J. Davis, John
By acceptance of this assignment he recognized the right of Minnie Pickens (nee Coburn) to dispose of said Coburn debt, under the settlement made upon her by Dever Pickens which was decreed to be fraudulent as to Susan Dent. All of said M. W. & Ledrue Coburn fund, except the $376.97 in the hands of appellee, has been applied on Susan Dent’s judgment. The amount now held by him is a part of the $1000.00 assigned for fees of himself and associate counsel in the Dent-Pickens suits, and the same liability attaches to it.
’ Even if the Court were satisfied that appellee has an attorney’s lien on said Coburn fund the record furnishes no information as to the extent of it. Appellee does not attempt to show what per cent, of the debt he is entitled to, nor what was the value of his services in respect to said fund. We do not think he has proven that he has an attorney’s lien; neither has he shown how much he claims under such lien, whether ten dollars or five hundred dollars.
For these additional reasons we think the former decree rendered by this Court on this appeal, on the 26th day of January, 1907, is right, and we refuse to reverse, or change it.
Reversed.
Reference
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