
    Johnson v. Missouri Pacific Railroad Company.
    Opinion delivered November 24, 1919.
    1. Attorney’s fees — lien—when enforceable. — Act 293, page 892, of 1909, providing for a lien for attorney’s fees upon his client’s cause of action, contemplates that the fee shall be determined, and lien therefor enforced, in the court in which the original action was disposed of by settlement, compromise and verdict. The court in which said action may be pending at the time of settlement, compromise or verdict, has the jurisdiction to determine and enforce the lien.
    2. Same — same—same.—Under act 293 of 1909, an attorney who has a lien upon his client’s cause of action, must follow any settlement, compromise or verdict in the court where the result of such settlement, compromise or verdict, is recorded, and the case finally disposed of, and have his claim for a lien there determined and enforced.
    Appeal from Independence Circuit Court; Dene E. Colemam, Judge;
    affirmed.
    
      Allyn Smith and Jo Johnson, for appellant.
    The Independence Circuit Court had jurisdiction to hear intervener’s petition. The order of the Director General was void under the act of Congress. 174 N. Y. Supp. 60; 210 S. W. 283; Kirby’s Digest, § 463. See also 5 Ark. 429; 27 Id. 315; 55 Kan. 331; 49 Ga 375; 77 Ark. 148; 91 S. W. 8; Kirby & Castle’s Digest, § 7538; 18 Conn. 71; 29 Id. 515; 15 N. Y. St. Rep. 598; 65 N. C. 478; 69 Id. 189; 12 Ark. 369; 41 Kan. 152; 2 Tenn. Ck. 141; 27 Ark, 315; 5 Id. 427; 42 Ind. 395; 17 Id. 354; 49 Iowa 183; 14 Cal. 139. When appellant commenced tke action in tke Independence court kis lien attacked, and it was beyond tke power of plaintiff to dismiss ker suit so as to prevent ker attorney from enforcing kis contract for a fee.
    
      Troy Pace, for appellee.
    Tke Independence Court did not exceed its judicial discretion in denying' appellant’s motion to reinstate tke causes formerly dismissed. Tke exhibits to the motion can not be considered, as they are not preserved in tke bill of exceptions. 53 Ark. 479; 37 Id. 543; 34 Id. 554. There is absolutely no showing that tke court abused its discretion in denying tke motion. 117 Ark. 514.
    Act 293, Acts 1909, page 892, provides that tke enforcement of a lien by an attorney can be had and enforced only in the court where tke action was pending that was settled. If in any other forum, it must be by independent suit. Sec. 2, Acts 1909, p. 892. After appellant was discharged as attorney, he had no right to continue tke suit, and tke judgment below is right. 117 Ark. 514; 128 Id. 471. Tke judgment in tke Baxter Circuit Court is res judicata. 29 Ark.' (80; 84 Id. 203. See also 1 R. C. L., sec. 24; 1 Cyc., § 275.
   McCULLOCH, C. J.

Mrs. Katherine King, as administratrix of tke estate of ker deceased husband through ker attorney, Jo'Johnson, instituted an action in tke Independence Circuit Court against tke Missouri Pacific Railroad Company to recover damages alleged to have accrued to tke estate and next of kin by reason of tke negligence of tke railroad in tke killing of James E. King.

After tke filing of tke complaint tke Director General of Railroads required that suits be commenced in tke •county where tke person injured by tke railroad company resided or in tke county where tke accident occurred,

After this rule was adopted, the administratrix, through her attorney, Jo Johnson, instituted suit against the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company on the same cause of action in Baxter County, but the suit first instituted in Independence County was not dismissed upon the bringing of the second suit.

Afterwards the plaintiff, Mrs. King, compromised and settled the case with the railroad company and dismissed the suit pending in the circuit court of Baxter County against the railroad company.

Following the order dismissing the cause in the Baxter Circuit Court, the plaintiff also dismissed the case, involving the same cause of action, that was pending in the Independence Circuit Court at a special term of that court, November 25, 1918. At the December term of the Independence Circuit Court, Jo Johnson filed a motion to set aside the order of dismissal and asking that the cause be redocketed and also filed his petition asking that he be allowed to intervene, setting up in substance that he had a contract 'with the plaintiff for a fee, as her attorney, in the sum of $3,976.50, and that under his contract he was entitled to a judgment against the railroad company for the sum of $3,976.50, for which he prayed.

As grounds for his motion to reinstate the cause in the Independence Circuit Court, Jo Johnson, among other things, alleged that, after the dismissal of the case that was pending in the Baxter Circuit Court, he made inquiry of the clerk of the Independence Circuit Court as to the time the court would convene, and the clerk replied by letter: “There won’t be any court before the term beginning the 30th day of December and these cases will be set for trial on Wednesday of the first week.” That after receiving this information he (Johnson) relied upon the same and was misled thereby and without any fault on his part was thus prevented from appearing in the Independence Circuit Court on the day the cause was dismissed.

The petition of the intervener, Jo Johnson, was resisted by the appellee, and the court entered the following judgment:

“On this January 1, 1919, comes the intervener in person and the defendant by its attorney, Troy Pace, and intervener’s motion to set aside dismissal and reinstate case and hear intervener’s petition for fee comes on to be heard.
“It is agreed by counsel that during the pendency of this cause here this same plaintiff by her same attorney commenced her suit in the Baxter Circuit Court on her same cause of action, as here, and thereafter the plaintiff dismissed that said suit without the approval of her said attorney, said intervener here, and still later this same plaintiff in the same Baxter Circuit Court again filed her same suit against this defendant and settled same with defendant through other attorneys.
“Therefore, this court is of the opinion that no jurisdiction remains or could remain here to consider intervener’s petition for fee as against defendant, and this court passes on no other question raised in intervener’s said motion to set aside dismissal and reinstate case.”

The court was correct in holding that the Independence Circuit Court had no jurisdiction to reinstate the cause for the purpose of adjudicating appellant’s claim for a fee and enforcing judgment for the same.

Act 293 of the Acts of 1909, page 892, providing a lien for attorney’s fees upon his client’s cause of action, contemplates that the fee shall be determined and the lien therefor enforced in the court in which the original action was disposed of 'by settlement, compromise or verdict. Section 2 of that act gives the court “in which said action may be pending at the time of settlement, compromise, or verdict,” the jurisdiction to determine and enforce the lien.

In St. Louis, I. M. & S. Ry. Co. v. Blaylock, 117 Ark. 504-14, we said: “A client may dismiss his cause of action or may settle with the opposite party without consulting his attorney, but where there are any proceeds resulting from the litigation, either through settlement or compromise, or as the final result of the prosecution of the lawsuit to the end, the attorney has a lien on such proceeds of which he can not he deprived by the parties to the lawsuit by any settlement they may make. ’ ’

Where an attorney seeks to have declared and enforce his lien for a fee in the same suit, which he instituted for his client and not in an independent action, it is the purpose of the statute to enable an attorney who has a lien upon his client’s cause of action to follow any settlement, compromise or verdict in the court where the result of such settlement, compromise or verdict is recorded and the case finally disposed of and have his claim for a lien there determined and enforced.

It appears, under the facts recited in the judgment to which appellant agreed, that' the cause of action upon which he claims a lien was finally settled on its merits in the Baxter Circuit Court. Appellant should have resorted to that court and no other and have his claim of lien adjudicated and enforced.

The judgment of the circuit court of Independence County overruling appellant’s motion to redocket the cause of Katherine King, Administrator, v. Missouri Pacific Ry. Co. is correct.

Judgment affirmed.  