
    Thomes Canary et al., Pl’ffs, v. Lillian Russell et al., Def’ts.
    
      (,Supreme Oourt, New York Special Term,
    
    
      Mled November, 1894.)
    1. Attorney and client—Lien.
    An attorney has a lien on the sum agreed to be paid on a settlement between the parties.
    2. Same.
    Such lien may be determined by a motion in an action.
    3 Same.
    In such case, the client is not entitled to a jury trial.
    Motion to determine the extent of lien and to impress the-fund, created in the action, with the amount of the lien when so determined.
    
      Ira Leo Bamberger and Herman F. Koeplce, for motion ; Howe & Hummel, opposed.
   Gaynor, J.

The lien of attorneys upon judgments recovered by them, and the proceeds thereof, did not have its origin in any statute. It grew out of the relation of attorney and client, and the injustice of allowing a client to take the proceeds of his attorney’s work and skill without paying him therefor. As was said in one case, the lien was invented to protect attorneys “ from the knavery of clients.” The method of enforcing the lien was by proceeding in the action itself. The money was required to be paid into court, and was held until the amount due to the attorney was ascertained and paid thereout. Goodrich v. McDonald, 112 N. Y. 157; 20 St. Rep. 509. It is true that when the said lien of attorneys had its origin, and for a long time thereafter, the compensation to attorneys was regulated by statute, and the only fees and charges which they could enforce were those prescribed by statute, so that the lien was for such fees and charges only. By the first Practice Code of this state the statutes (2 Rev. St. pp. 623-631) which constituted the fee bill were repealed, and it was also indicated that “ all rules and provisions of law restricting or controlling the right of a party to agree with an attorney, solicitor or counsel for his compensation are repealed ; and hereafter the measure of such compensation shall be left to the agreement, express or implied, of the parties.”' It was also provided, however, that “ there may be allowed to the prevailing party, upon the judgment, certain sums by way of indemnity, for his expenses in the action; which allowances are is this act called ‘costs.’ ” Code Proc. § 303. It will be observed that nothing was here said concerning any lien of attorneys. It has, however, been uniformly held that such lien continued. Whatever controversy there has been on the subject has been in respect of the extent of the lien and the method of its enforcement. It would be waste of time to discuss the cases which have arisen concerning the extent of the lien,—whether it covered taxable costs only, or also included the compensation agreed upon,—for in 1889 our present Practice Code'was so amended that for all compensation arising out of agreement the attorney “ has a lien upon his client’s cause of action or counterclaim, which attaches to a verdict, report, decision or judgment in his client’s favor, and the proceeds thereof in whosoever hands they may come ; and cannot be affected by any settlement between the parties before or after judgment.” Code Civ. Pro. § 66. These words are comprehensive enough "to cover the cause of action and all incidents in the progress thereof, including its settlement, and the amount agreed to be paid thereupon, which is the case now in hand. A settlement has been agreed upon, the defendant to pay a sum of money therefor. Her present managers áre ready to pay the money, and appear in this proceeding only to submit to any order the court may make. It is objected that the court may not, in this application in the action itself, thus stop the money in transitu, determine the amount due to the attorney for the plaintiffs on quantum meruit, and pay him out of the fund, but that he must be left to bring an action for his services, in which the defendants therein (the plaintiffs herein) will be entitled to a jury trial. If an action were brought by the attorney to enforce his lien, —for, as we have seen, he has a lien by express statute,—the defendants therein would not be entitled to a jury trial; so that objection need not be considered. The only question is whether the attorney’s lien may be enforced in the action itself. As we ‘have seen, that was the method of enforcing it when fee bills existed, and measured the compensation of attorneys. It would not be ¿suggested that that has not also been the method in respect of taxable costs. It seems to me to follow that it is also a proper method in respect to compensation agreed upon, for there are not two liens, one for taxable costs and one for compensation, to be enforced separately, but on the contrary, there is only one indivisible lien. The lien which has long existed in favor of attorneys was by the said Code amendment extended unmistakably, and so as to do away with doubt or controversy, to any compensation due to the attorney by agreement, express or implied. It is the same lien in character and in equitable conscience which existed under the fee bill, only extended to meet the changed relations of attorney and client, in that they are permitted to agree upon whatever compensation to the attorney they please. The motion is therefore granted, the court to take testimony at some convenient time, or a reference may be taken if the parties agree to it. The money may be paid into the Kings County Trust Company to the credit of the action to await further order.  