
    Louis Cohn, Plaintiff, v. Isaac Polstein, Ray Polstein, Amelia Cohn, Defendants.
    (Supreme Court, New York Special Term,
    October, 1903.)
    Attorney’s lien — Honest settlements of litigants encouraged — Protection of the lien.
    Under Code Civ. Pro., § 66, an attorney has a lien upon his client’s cause of action but the existence of his lien does not permit him to stand in the way of an honest settlement of the parties.
    Thereupon the attorney is entitled to follow the proceeds of the settlement, so far as they belong to his client, and to be paid out of them before creditors.
    Where an attorney brought an action of partition and the parties agreed pending it to continue as cotenants of the premises and discontinue the action and the plaintiff notified his attorney to take no further steps in it and no sale was had and the client’s interest in the premises was a sufficient security for the attorney’s claim for services, the court refused him leave to continue the action to final judgment to enforce Ms lien but held that he had a first lien upon his client’s interest in the premises and appointed a referee to take proof and report to the court whether there was an express agreement for compensation, and if so, the damages from the breach, or, failing that, the amount due the attorney upon a quantum meruit — the referee to report the testimony, his findings of fact and conclusions of law.
    Memoir by the plaintiff’s attorney for leave to continue an action of partition to final judgment to enforce his lien for services and for further relief.'
    Henry Brill, for plaintiff.
    William Bernard, for defendant Polstein.
   Clarke, J.

Motion is made by the plaintiff’s attorney for leave to continue this action in partition to final judgment for the purpose of enforcing his lien for services, and for such other and further relief as to the court may seem proper. The plaintiff’s attorney claims that the measure of compensation agreed upon was to be whatever costs and allowances might be awarded in the action. This agreement is not specifically denied by the plaintiff, who, however, states that he has not been able to agree with his attorney upon the sum due for services. The action was commenced for the partition of two parcels of land, one an unimproved lot on Washington avenue, stated to be worth between $12,000 and $15,000, and the other an apartment-house known as No. 17 Livingston place, conceded by both parties to be worth $250,000, and on which there is a mortgage of $160,000. In February, 1903, by consent, an order was entered vacating and discharging of record the Us pendens against the unimproved parcel, which order is made expressly without prejudice to the plaintiff’s attorney’s costs and allowances herein, which are to be chargeable entirely against the other property. In May, 1903, a motion was made at Special Term, by the plaintiff, for leave to substitute another attorney in place of the petitioner herein, and the motion was granted upon condition that the plaintiff give a bond in the sum of $1,500 to pay whatever sum a referee named in said order should find to he the value of the services of the plaintiff’s attorney. The condition contained in said order was never complied with, as the bond was never given, and, therefore, the substitution did not take place and the value of petitioner’s services was not determined. The plaintiff, however, served a notice upon his attorney directing him to desist from taking any further steps in the partition action. The plaintiff and defendant have settled their differences and agreed to continue as cotenants of the premises and to discontinue the partition suit. The petitioner states that there are many unpaid judgments on record against the plaintiff and that petitioner believes him to be insolvent. The plaintiff does not deny that there are judgments against him, but states that he is solvent. Under these circumstances the motion to continue the action must be-denied. The petitioner relies upon section 66 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which has greatly increased the powers of court in enforcing liens. In many cases this court has held that an attorney may continue an action to enforce his lien, but proper settlements are uniformly encouraged. Where there is an honest settlement in good faith it may be made without the attorney’s consent in case the attorney’s claim is not prejudiced thereby. Mr. Justice Parker, in Young v. Howell, 64 App. Div. 246, says: The court will enforce such lien whenever it is necessary to do so in order to protect the attorney’s legal claims, but the client still has the unrestricted control of the subject of the action and the terms upon which the settlement may be made, and such a settlement is not affected by such section unless it operate to the prejudice of the attorney’s claim. Such seems to be the rule as enunciated in the following cases: Lee v. V. O. Co., 126 N. Y. 579; Poole v. Belcha, 131 id. 200; Peri v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co., 152 id. 521.” And the question has been finally determined by the Court of Appeals in the recent case of Fischer-Hansen v. Brooklyn Heights R. R. Co., 173 N. Y. 492. Judge Vann, at page 500, says: “A cause of action is not the property of the attorney, but of the client. The attorney owns no part of it, for a lien does not give a right to property, hut a charge upon it. As it is merely incidental and for the purpose of security only, it would not be reasonable to hold that the legislature intended it should be the means of blocking an honest and genuine adjustment of controversies. We think the lien is subject to the right of the client to settle in good faith, without regard to the wish of the attorney, and we so held in the Peri case, where we declared that the existence of the lien does not permit the plaintiff’s attorney to stand in the way of a settlement.’ ” It is clear in this case that the settlement has been made in good faith, the plaintiff and defendant have determined that it is best not to sell the property in partition, and are negotiating for a loan on said property. The settlement is made with no intention to deprive the attorney of his just compensation. Whether in this case the client is solvent or not, the attorney is fully protected because his lien is not lost by the settlement, but attaches to the proceeds of the settlement. Judge Vann, in the Eischer-Hansen case, at page 501, in speaking of the right of the parties to settle, says: The right of the parties to thus settle is absolute and the settlement determines the cause of action and liquidates the claim. This necessarily involves the reciprocal right of the attorney to follow the proceeds of the settlement, and if they have been paid over to the client, to insist that his share be ascertained and paid to him.” It has been held in many cases that the attorney has a lien against, the proceeds of settlements made or judgments entered without his consent (Poole v. Belcha, 131 N. Y. 200; Lee v. V. O. Co., 126 id. 579, 587; Matter of Gates, 51 App. Div. 350; Bevins v. Albro, 86 Hun, 590), and even against the land taken on foreclosure of a mortgage, or adjudged to belong to the client. Skinner v. Busse, 38 Misc. Rep. 265; West v. Bacon, 13 App. Div. 371. In Cooper v. Cooper, 51 App. Div. 595, appeal dismissed without opinion, 164 N. Y. 576, it was held that an attorney has a first lien which attaches to the proceeds of a sale in partition, and creditors only become entitled after the attorney has received his compensation. As there has been no sale, the question presents itself, to what does the attorney’s lien attach? The plaintiff, instead of making an actual division of the property with the defendant or taking the cash value of his share, has agreed to continue the owner of an one undivided half interest in the premises. In this case that undivided interest is what the plaintiff has agreed to take upon discontinuance of the suit, and to that interest the attorney’s lien attaches. It is, therefore, determined that the petitioner has a first lien upon the interest of his client in premises known as No. 17 Livingston place. Section 66 of the Code of Civil Procedure gives the court, upon the petition of the attorney, express authority “ to determine and enforce the lien.” Although the motion to continue the action is denied, the court has power under the prayer for other and further relief to order the appropriate procedure. The attorney, had he so chosen, could have brought an action to foreclose his lien (Fischer-Hansen v. Brooklyn Heights R. R. Co., 173 N. Y. 492; Skinner v. Busse, 38 Misc. Rep. 265), but such relief is cumulative merely, and the court may not properly, in the exercise of its discretion, deprive the petitioner of the remedy for the enforcement of his right provided by the Code. Matter of King, 168 N. Y. 53. The client concedes that he retained the petitioner, but competent proof must be presented as to whether there was an express agreement as to compensation, and if so, of the damage suffered from breach thereof, or, if there was no express agreement, then of the amount due on a quantum meruit. Matter of Dept. of Public Works, 167 N. Y. 501. An order may, therefore, be entered following the procedure in the case last cited and in Matter of King, 168 N. Y. 53, and Peri v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co., 152 id. 521, 525, appointing a referee to take proof of the facts and circumstances of the matters set forth, in the papers read in support and in opposition to this application, with direction to report the testimony, together with findings of fact and conclusions of law, to the court.

Ordered accordingly.  