
    Antonio Guliano v. John H. Whitenack.
    (New York Common Pleas—Special Term,
    September, 1894.)
    Costs are the property of the attorney.
    An attorney’s lien for compensation attaches to the judgment in the hands of an assignee for value without actual notice; a fortiori if there be such notice. 1
    A collusive satisfaction of judgment will be set aside in favor of the attorney’s lien, and semble, even though the satisfaction be without intent to defraud the attorney.
    On a motion to set aside such satisfaction the court, upon evidence, may determine the extent of the attorney’s lien and set aside the satisfaction to that amount.
    In a proceeding to enforce an attorney’s lien on a judgment,.neither the judgment debtor nor an assignee of the judgment can impeach it for lack of authority to prosecute the action in which the judgment issued.
    Motion to set aside a satisfaction of judgment.
    
      J. Wamsley, for motion.
    
      Smith & Dougherty, opposed.
   Pryor, J.

In an action for personal injury the plaintiff had judgment for damages and costs; an assignee of the judgment has given a formal satisfaction of it, and now plaintiff’s attorney moves to set aside the satisfaction on the ground that it is in fraud of his lien.

By contract with the client the attorney was to receive, in compensation of his services, one-third of the damages recovered. Notice of the agreement was communicated to the defendant with the service of the summons. The judgment is for $250 damages and $114.16 costs. The attorney has been paid no part of his fee or costs, and it is conceded that the client is irresponsible.

The assignee resists the application to vacate the satisfaction on the ground, among others, that the prosecution of the action was without the authority and, indeed, against the will of the plaintiff. I do not so find the fact. But, in any event, the client suffered the case to go to judgment without challenging the authority of the attorney, and it is now too late to impeach the judgment for that infirmity. Moreover, the assignee claims to be owner of the judgment for value, and the defendant asserts that he has given value for its satisfaction ; how then can either be heard to say that it is invalid? Any question as to its validity is beside the scope of the present controversy ( Whittaker v. R. R. Co., 18 Abb. N. C. 11, 18), which is, whether the satisfaction shall prevail against the attorney’s lien.

From the principle that an assignee of a judgment takes subject to equities, and acquires no better right than has his assignor (Gates v. De La Mare, 20 N. Y. Supp. 837), and from the express provision of the Code (§ 66), that a attorney’s lien attaches to the judgment in whosesoever hands,” it results that the attorney is not barred of relief even by a transfer for value without notice and a bona fide satisfaction of the judgment: I do not concede, however, that the assign-

ment by the plaintiff, the employee of defendant, to the defendant’s son was in good faith; on the contrary, I conclude, from the facts before me, that the assignment and the satisfaction both were made with knowledge of the attorney’s lien and collusively with intent to defraud him of his compensation.

It follows, therefore, that the satisfaction must be vacated and the attorney’s lien enforced to the extent of his • rightful claim. Bailey v. Murphy, 136 N. Y. 50; Poole v. Belcha, 131 id. 200; Ward v. Wordsworth, 1 E. D. Smith, 598. That claim is not in controversy. The attorney is entitled to the costs by legal right (Marshall v. Meech, 51 N. Y. 140 Matter of Bailey, 31 Hun, 608; People ex rel. Reynolds v. Common Council, 1 Misc. Rep. 386; Adams v. Stillman, 4 id. 259), and here the amount of his fee is fixed, by express agreement with the client, at a fair and equitable sum. To ascertain on this motion the extent of the attorney’s lien is not an arbitrary determination, within the ruling in Bailey v. Murphy, 136 N. Y. 50, but is an adjudication upon evidence in an appropriate proceeding. Whittaker v. R. R. Co., 18 Abb. N. C. 11.

Let an order be entered vacating and setting aside the satisfaction of judgment to the extent of the attorney’s just demand, namely, $258.09, the aggregate sum of his costs and interest in the damages, with ten dollars costs of motion:

Ordered accordingly.  