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[MENZI v. FRANCISCO BASTIDA ET AL.](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/c1af7?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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[ GR No. 42278, Mar 25, 1936 ]

MENZI v. FRANCISCO BASTIDA ET AL. +

DECISION

63 Phil. 16

[ G. R. No. 42278, March 25, 1936 ]

MENZI & COMPANY, INC., PLAINTIFF AND APPELLEE, VS. FRANCISCO BASTIDA ET AL., DEFENDANTS. THE BANK OF THE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS, THE PHILIPPINE GUARANTY CO., INC., AND MACONDRAY & CO., INC., APPELLANTS.

D E C I S I O N

IMPERIAL, J.:

In  civil case No. 31956 of the Court of First Instance of Manila, G. R. No. 358401 of this court, entitled Francisco Bastida, plaintiff, vs. Menzi & Co., Inc., et al., defendants, final judgment was rendered  on appeal  ordering Menzi & Co., Inc., to pay to Francisco Bastida the sum of P21,633.20 with legal interest thereon from June  17, 1927, without costs.  Said  sum  with  interest  thereon   amounted  to P29,774.49 on September 25,  1933.

Prior to the  issuance of a writ of execution of the final judgment so rendered, Menzi  & Co., Inc., received written notices from Levy Hermanos,  Inc., the Bank of the Philippine Islands, Manuel Bustamante, Filipinas Lumber  Co., Inc., the  Philippine Guaranty Co., Inc., Claro M.  Recto, Jose M. Casal, Alberto Barretto and Manuel Nieto alleging that they were Francisco Bastida's creditors in the amounts specified by each of them and that, their respective  claims being preferred claims, they  asked to be paid with pref- erence.  In order that the courts might finally determine the alleged preferences and the order in  which they  should be paid, and to avoid subsequent responsibilities, Menzi & Co., Inc., brought  an action  of inter-pleading against  all the said creditors and on said  date,  September 25, 1933, it deposited the sum of P29,774.49 with the clerk  of the Court of First Instance of Manila.  The action so brought was docketed as No. 45209.

On April 18, 1934, judgment was rendered in said case ordering that the credits be paid in the order and preference as follows: the sum of P23,041.69 to Levy Hermanos, Inc.; the sum of P1,300  to Claro M. Recto; the sum of P4,000 to Jose M. Casal, or to his assignee Macondray & Co.; the sum of P1,000 to Alberto Barretto;  the sum  of P100 as attorney's fees  and P76.04 as judicial expenses to Harvey and O'Brien, and the balance to the Bank  of the Philippine Islands.

The  Bank of the Philippine  Islands,  Filipinas  Lumber Co., Inc., Macondray & Co., Inc., and the Philippine  Guaranty Co., Inc., filed motions  for a new trial which were denied; but only the Bank of the Philippine Islands, Ma- condray & Co.,  Inc., and the Philippine Guaranty Co., Inc., filed a joint bill of exceptions thus making them the only appellants.

Pending the appeal and  before  it was considered, the creditor and appellee Claro M. Recto filed a motion withdrawing his claim on the ground that being now a member of this court  he does not desire to intervene as litigant in any case pending before it, preferring to collect his credit for  professional services  directly from the then  plaintiff Francisco Bastida.   The motion was favorably acted upon and therefore  said creditor has ceaded to be an appellee in this  case.

Francisco Bastida owed Levy Hermanos, Inc.,4he sum of P18,531.42 representing the value  of autotrucks and  an automobile bought by him on the installment plan, having constituted mortgages on six (6) Dodge Brothers autotrucks and  a seven-passenger Hudson Sedan,  which mortgages were duly registered.  On May 11, 1931, after Bastida had obtained judgment in his favor in civil case No. 31956, Levy Hermanos, Inc., was informed that the securities given to it by Bastida  had greatly depreciated  in value due to the constant use thereof, for which reason it required Bastida to transfer  to it part of the judgment obtained by him sufficient to cover the balance in  question plus  interest thereon on  the date of the execution of  the  judgment. Bastida agreed and on  said  date he  executed  Exhibit F-Levy Hnos., Inc.  whereby he sold, ceded and conveyed to said creditor an aliquot part of  the judgment obtained by him sufficient to pay the said balance with the stipulated interest thereon until the date of the execution of the judg- ment.  The document so executed was legalized by a notary on the 26th of said  month and year and on the following day, the 27th, it  served  Menzi &  Co., Inc., with  a copy thereof, notifying the latter of the existence of said assignment.  On said date it attached a certified copy of said deed to the record of civil case No. 31956.  On October 25, 1933, the date  on which Levy Hermanos, Inc.,  filed  its answer,  its credit  amounted to P23,041.69 including the stipulated  interest  thereon up to said date.

On March 30, 1932, Francisco Bastida and Jose M. Casal executed a promissory note for P10,000  in favor of the Bank of the Philippine Islands, binding themselves to pay said amount jointly and severally after ninety (90)  days with  interest  thereon at 9 per cent per  annum plus the penal sum of P1,000 as judicial expenses and attorney's fees,  in case the creditor should be  compelled to  resort to the courts.  To secure  the promissory note  which became due on June 28, 1932, Francisco Bastida, on the  9th  of November of said year, executed Exhibit A-B. I. F. whereby he mortgaged the judgment  obtained  by him in civil case No. 31956 to the Bank of  the Philippine  Islands.  This mortgage deed was  registered in the  registry of deeds of the City of Manila on December 3,  1932,  and on April 3, 1933, the Bank of the Philippine Islands notified Menzi & Co., Inc., of the existence thereof and that its credit then amounted to P12,000, and requested  that it be paid preferentially.

Jose M.  Casal was one  of the attorneys  for Francisco Bastida in civil case No. 31956 and  on September 9, 1933, he filed a notice of attorney's lien for the sum of P6,000 with  the records and notified Menzi & Co., Inc., thereof; on the 12th of said month this court, in a  resolution, made said attorney's lien of record.  Attorney Casal later transferred all his interest in said attorney's lien  to Macondray &  Co., Inc., who substituted him in this  appeal.

In  civil case No. 44123  of the Court of First  Instance of Manila, the Philippine Guaranty Co., Inc., obtained judgment  against Francisco Bastida for the recovery of a certain sum of money.   On August 17,1933,  said company, through the sheriff, attached the judgment finally obtained by Bastida in civil case No. 31956 to enforce the  execution issued for the sum of P6,045.36, notifying Menzi & Co.,  Inc., thereof.

Alberto Barretto is one of the attorneys who defended Francisco Bastida in civil case No.  31956.   On September 15,1933,  he filed a  notice of attorney's lien in the case and notified Menzi & Co., Inc., thereof.  This court, in a resolution of the 19th of said month ordered that the attorney's lien  be attached to the  record.   Said attorney claimed 10 per cent of  the funds on deposit, or P2,977.45. The court, however,  reduced it to 91,000.

The Bank of the Philippine Islands claims that in the appealed  judgment the court erred: (1)  In not holding that the transfer or assignment made by Francisco Bastida in favor  of Levy Hermanos, Inc.,  was fictitious; (2)  in holding that the credit of  Levy Hermanos, Inc., enjoys priority over the other claims; (3)  in holding that Alberto Barretters credit enjoys preference over its claims; (4)  in also giving preference  to Jose M.  Casal's  credit .over its claim; (5)  in also giving preference to Claro M. Recto's credit over its claim; (6) in granting to the attorneys for the herein plaintiff fees in the sum of P100 and  in considering said fees as preference credit over  its claim; (7) in holding its claim inferior to those of Levy Hermanos, Inc., Recto, Barretto,  Casal and to the fees of the attorneys for the plaintiff; (8) in not holding its claim superior to those of the other creditors; (9)  in not rendering judgment in its favor ordering payment of its credit with preference to the other claims;  and (10) in rendering the  appealed judgment.

In its brief the Bank of the Philippine Islands discusses its first two assignments of error jointly.   Following the same order we  shall  also pass upon said assignments at once.  The Bank of the Philippine Islands did not present any  evidence to prove  its allegation that the assignment made by  Bastida in  favor of Levy Hermanos,  Inc., was fictitious.   The defect thus alleged is equivalent  to fraud. Fraud cannot be presumed but it must be proved with the same degree of certainty with which the essential elements of a contract alleged  to be false are proved (art. 1300 of the Civil Code; Campania General de Tabacos vs.  Obed, 13 Phil., 391; Arroyo vs. Granada and Gentero, 18 Phil., 484; Antonio vs. Aloe, 25 Phil., 147).  The record shows that when  Bastida assigned his judgment credit to Levy Hermanos,  Inc., he was  indebted to said company in the huge sum of P18,531.42 plus interest thereon at 10 per cent per annum  and that the trucks and automobile with which he secured  the obligation had greatly depreciated in value by reason  of the regular and constant  use thereof.  To settle his debt Bastida had a perfect right to assign the necessary part of his judgment credit in accordance with the provisions of article 1175 of the Civil Code.  The  circumstance  that  the obligation was then secured  by two chattel mortgages did not prevent Bastida from  making the assignment or Levy Hermanos, Inc., from accepting it. When Bastida assigned his judgment credit,  he was  the absolute owner thereof and no writ of attachment of his property was issued against him.  Therefore the Bank of the Philippine  Islands cannot invoke the  provisions of article 1297 of the Civil  Code.   It is superfluous to state that in the assignment there was valid cause or consideration, consisting in the debt, and therefore neither can it be claimed  that the transfer was  gratuitous.  We  shall discuss the  credits of the other  claimants as  well as  the priority or preference thereof when we take into consideration the  said appellant's other  assignments of error.  It follows, therefore, that the first two assignments of error are not well founded.

In its third assignment of error the Bank of the Philip- pine Islands discusses Attorney Alberto  Barretto's credit for fees  and contends that its credit has preference over the latter's.   It will be remembered that the court granted this attorney fees in the  sum of P1,000  for services rendered to Francisco Bastida in civil case  No. 31956.   The first time this attorney made his attorney's lien appear of record and notified Menzi & Co. thereof was on September 15,1933.  Francisco Bastida mortgaged his judgment credit to the Bank of the Philippine Islands on November 9, 1932, and the deed executed to that effect was duly registered on December 3d  of said year.  It follows, therefore, that the mortgage credit  of the Bank of the Philippine  Islands is prior to Attorney Barretto's  lien and, consequently;  the former should be paid in preference  to  the  latter.   According to section 37 of the  Code  of  Civil Procedure on which Attorney Barretto bases his claim, a lawyer's  lien on judgments and decrees for the payment  of money  and the preference thereof arise only from the date on which the right is caused to be  entered upon the records and the adverse party notified thereof.  We therefore hold that  the third assignment of  error is  well  founded and that  the credit of the  Bank of the Philippine  Islands is superior and has preference over  that  of Attorney Barretto.

In the fourth assignment of error the Bank of the Philippine  Islands questions Attorney  Jose M.  Casal's credit which, as stated, was assigned or transferred to the other appellant Macondray &  Co.  Casal caused his Hen  to be entered upon the records  and notified  Menzi  & Co., Inc., thereof on September 9, 1933, after which he  assigned all his right to Macondray & Co.   The Bank of  the Philippine Islands contends that as the lien had been assigned  the preference thereof has ceased.   The principle sought to be applied does not  seem to  us correct nor just.  The generally accepted  doctrine is that an  attorney's lien may be assigned  or transferred  without  the  preference  thereof being extinguished, with the exception that the doctrine does  not  extend to cases where the assignment carries with  it a  breach of  the attorney's  duty  to preserve  his client's confidence inviolate (6 C. J., 769, 770).  "Although an attorney cannot assign a contract  for his  services to be rendered, and substitute another attorney in his place, without the consent of his client, he may assign a debt substantially due for services rendered; and where a firm of attorneys was to receive a certain compensation for their services, provided they should accomplish certain results, the surviving partner may,  after the services which they promised to render, and the  ends  which they  agreed to accomplish, were all practically rendered and accomplished, assign all the right and title  of the firm in the contract for such  services,  and all  the moneys  due or to become  due thereunder, and  the assignee  may  recover upon the contract."   (Taylor vs. Black  Diamond  Coal  Mining  Company, 86  Cal.,  589.)  "The assignment by an attorney of a  specified  sum  to  be  paid  out  of  the first  money  to be received by him upon  a percentage fee contracted  to be paid on the value  of the property  realized by  his  client creates an equitable lien on  such percentage fee in  favor of the assignee in the sum specified."   (Goad vs. Hart, 128 Cal., 197.)  We hold, therefore, that the mere assignment of the attorney's lien did not result in extinguishing the preference.   However, it appears that Attorney Casal's lien was caused to appear in the records and notice thereof to the adverse party was made only on  September 9,  1933, long after the  mortgage executed by Bastida in favor of the Bank of the Philippine Islands, which was registered on December 3, 1932.  Resolving Attorney Barretto's claim we stated that  pursuant to the provisions of section  37 of the Code of Civil Procedure, an attorney's lien enjoys preference only from the time it is entered upon the records and notice thereof served  on the adverse party.  This provision is applicable  to the case of Attorney Casal and therefore his claim  is inferior to the  mortgage credit of the Bank of the Philippine Islands and cannot be paid preferentially.  We hold, therefore, that the fourth assignment  of error is  likewise well founded.

In its fifth assignment of error, the Bank of the Philippine Islands questions  Attorney Claro M. Recto's credit and the preference  thereof.   In a resolution of March 18, 1936,  said claimant was eliminated as party to the case and in view thereof, and because he  is no longer interested in any judgment to  be  rendered therein,  it is unnecessary to pass upon this fifth assignment of error.

The Bank of the Philippine Islands contends in its sixth assignment of error that the court should not have granted fees in the sum of P100 to the attorneys for the herein plaintiff, Menzi & Co.,  Inc.  Counsel for the  Bank of the Philippine Islands cites  no authority in support of his theory.  Section 120 of the Code of Civil Procedure which authorizes the bringing of an action of interpleading contains no provision relative to fees  of the attorney for the plaintiff in such actions.   However, taking  into consideration the purpose of an action of interpleading, it seems just that the fees of an interpleader's attorney be defrayed with  the  funds sought to be distributed, unless there  be some reason justifying payment thereof by some of the defendants in the case.  "According to many authorities, complainant is entitled, as a part of his costs, to an attorney's fee commensurate with  the  services of his counsel in the cause, eventually to fall  on the claimant who was in the wrong and  made the litigation necessary,  and this is expressly  provided  by  statute  in  some   jurisdictions. *   *   *  In any case, the  allowance for attorney's fees should be  limited to a  reasonable  fee for necessary services."  (33  C. J., 470, and the cases therein cited.)    It appears that the amount of the fees granted is not questioned nor  is  it claimed that it is exorbitant or unreasonable. Truly, the sum  fixed is very reasonable and proportionate to  the  amount and quality of the professional  services rendered.  As to the order of payment of these fees, the law is likewise silent;  but being in the nature of costs, according to the American doctrine referred  to above, they should be paid in preference to all claims and at the same time  as judicial costs.  In  its brief  the plaintiff-appellee likewise prays that it be granted the costs of both instances, including the expenses incurred in the printing of its brief. We agree to the recovery of costs but we cannot authorize the refund of the expenses  incurred in the printing of  its brief because it is expressly prohibited by section 494 of the Code  of Civil Procedure.

The rest of the assignments of error of the Bank of the Philippine Islands do not require further discussion because the questions raised therein have already been settled in the foregoing considerations.

Macondray & Co.,  the other  appellant and  assignee of Attorney Jose M. Casal's lien, assigns  the following errors as committed in the judgment, to wit: (1) In holding that the credit of Levy Hermanos, Inc., enjoys preference  over Attorney Casal's lien, and consequently over its credit; (2) in holding that  Attorney Claro M. Recto's lien has priority over its credit,  and (3) in reducing Attorney Casal's fees to P4,000.

The first assignment does not require further discussion. It has already been settled  that Casal's credit, now Macondray &  Co.'s, is inferior to that of  Levy Hermanos,  Inc., Joy virtue of the provisions of section 37  of  the  Code of Civil Procedure that  an attorney's lien enjoys preference only from  the  date  a statement thereof is caused to be entered  upon the records and notice thereof served to the adverse  party.  Casal's lien was caused to be entered upon the records jind Menzi &  Co., Inc., notified thereof  long after Bastida had transferred his judgment credit to Levy Hermanos  and  also after said Bastida had mortgaged it to the Bank of the  Philippine Islands.  We, therefore,  hold that the first assignment of error is  unfounded.

The second assignment, referring to  Attorney Recto who has already ceased to be a party to  the  suit,  does not require further consideration.

Neither is it  necessary to dwell at length upon the last assignment of error in view  of the fact that the funds to be distributed will not be sufficient to pay Attorney Casal's claim, now Macondray & Co.'s, and therefore the question relative  to  the  amount of said attorney's fees is  immaterial.

The last appeal is that taken by the Philippine Guaranty Co., Inc.  This  appellant claims that the judgment  of the court erred: (1) In not declaring that the assignment made by Bastida to Levy Hermanos, Inc., is fraudulent;  (2)  in not holding that the mortgage constituted by Bastida  in favor of the Bank  of the Philippine  Islands  is null and void; (3) in holding that the claims of Barretto and Recto for attorney's fees  have  preference over its credit;  (4)  in holding that the claim of Macondray & Co. has preference over its credit;  (5) in granting fees  in the sum of P100 to the attorneys of Menzi & Co., Inc., and (6)  in not holding that its credit is superior and preferential to all the rest.

In its brief, the Philippine  Guaranty Co., Inc., discusses jointly its first and second assignments  of error.  In considering the first two assignments of error of the  appellant Bank of the Philippine Islands, we already stated that the assignment made by Bastida,  in favor of Levy Hermanos, Inc., was legal and valid  and not vitiated by  alleged  fraud. We then stated at length our reasons  for arriving at that conclusion.  The  Philippine Guaranty Co., Inc.,  offers no new arguments nor citations of legal authorities in its brief. The same point  having been sufficiently discussed, we see no advantage in repeating herein the  same considerations already made.  With respect  to the claim of the Bank  of the Philippine Islands, it is, by reason of dates, superior and preferential to that of the Philippine Guaranty Co., Inc.   The mortgage credit of the former was legally registered  prior to the latter's garnishment.  There is not the slightest token that the mortgage is fraudulent or that some  defect invalidating it was  present at  the  execution thereof.  We hold that these first and second assignments of error are unfounded.

In its third assignment of error, the  Philippine Guaranty Co., Inc., impugns  the claims of  Attorneys  Barretto and Recto  and the  preference  thereof.   The questions now raised by it nave already been passed upon when the same claims were discussed in connections with those of the Bank of the Philippine Islands and  Macondray & Co.  We have nothing to repeat as regards Attorney Recto  because he has already ceased to be a  party to the case.   As  to the Philippine Guaranty Co., Inc., Attorney Barretto's lien is inferior and enjoys  no preference on the ground that said right was caused to be entered upon the records after the former's attachment, by  way of garnishment, of the judgment obtained by Bastida, which took place on August 17, 1933.

In  its  fourth assignment of  error, the Philippine  Guaranty Co., Inc., contends that its claim has preference over that of Macondray & Co.   By reason of dates, the former's claim is  superior to that of the latter because Casal's lien and  the  transfer thereof to Macondray & Co. took place after the attachment made by the Philippine  Guaranty Co.,  Inc.

In  its  fifth assignment of error said  appellant likewise questions the correctness of the fees of the attorneys for the plaintiff Menzi & Co., Inc.  This controversy has already been  passed upon in discussing the sixth assignment  of error of  the Bank of the Philippine Islands. It is unnecessary to repeat here all that  has then been stated.  We hold that the fifth assignment  of error  is unfounded.

In its sixth and last assignment  of error, the Philippine Guaranty Co., Inc., contends that its claim is superior and preferential to  the claims of all the rest.  Under the considerations set  forth in the foregoing paragraphs we hold that its claim should occupy the fourth place and should be paid  in the order later to  be established,  in  case  the funds on deposit  are sufficient.

As a corollary of all  the foregoing,  we hold  that  the claims involved in  these appealls enjoy  preference in  the order as follows:  (1) The fees of the  attorneys  for  the plaintiff  Menzi  & Co., Inc., and the costs of both instances to which it is entitled under sections 492 and 494 of the Code of  Civil Procedure; (2) the claim or credit of Levy Hermanos, Inc.;  (3) the claim  or credit  of the  Bank  of the  Philippine Islands;  (4) the claim or  credit of  the Philippine Guaranty Co., Inc.;  (5)  the claim or credit of Macondray & Co.; and (6) the claim or credit of Alberto Barretto.  These claims will be payable in the order established if the funds on deposit are sufficient.

Wherefore, with modification of the appealed judgment, it is ordered that of  the sum  of P29,774.49 deposited by the plaintiff with the clerk of the Court of First Instance of Manila, the following be paid: First, the costs of both instances to said plaintiff and  the sum of "P100 to the attorneys thereof; second, the sum of P23,041.69 to  Levy Hermanos, Inc., and  third, the  entire  balance  of the amount of money on deposit to the Bank of the Philippine Islands, as partial payment of its claim.  That part of the appealed judgment releasing the  plaintiff from all further responsibility arising  from the judgment rendered in civil case No. 31956, is affirmed.   So ordered.

Avanceña,  C. J.,  Villa-Real, Abad Santos,  Diaz,  and Laurel, JJ., concur.




RESOLUTION ON MOTION FOR RECONSIDERATION


                                                    July 17, 1936

IMPERIAL, J.;

Macondray & Co., Inc., and Alberto Barretto filed a motion for reconsideration seeking to set aside the  decision rendered in the cause and praying that another be rendered declaring that their credits have preference  over those of Levy Hermanos,  Inc.,  and  the Bank  of the Philippine Islands, so that the latter's credits be paid after theirs.

The first ground of the motion alleges  that "Levy Hermanos, Inc., in causing the assignment to it of a part of the judgment rendered  by the Court of First Instance of Manila  in  civil  case No. 31956, to be entered upon the records,  became a quasi party to the suit and cannot recover any amount or part thereof without first paying the fees of  the attorneys who intervened in  said litigation." The contention is untenable  and finds no support in any law.  In legal technicality quasi parties are those who are already represented in  the suit, or who come within the compass of the proceedings pendente lite (Atlantic Refining Co. vs. Port Lobos Petroleum Corporation, 280 Fed., 934, 939).  Under section 114 of the Code  of Civil Procedure. a party to an action or proceeding is the person who has a material and direct interest in the pending action, or who has an interest in the subject of the action and in obtaining the relief demanded.   Even after Levy Hermanos, Inc., had  obtained the assignment  and caused the  acquisition thereof to be entered upon the records, it had no interest in the subject matter of the litigation  between Bastida and  Menzi & to.,  Inc.  It  was  not  formerly represented in the suit.  It had neither  direct  nor indirect interest in Bastida's  causes of action against  Menzi  & Co., Inc. All the interest obtained by it had direct bearing on the judgment obtained by Bastida against Menzi &  Co., Inc. Its right to that part of the judgment  acquired under the assignment  was  contingent  and inchoative inasmuch  as it was enforceable only  upon the affirmation of modification  of the judgment,  as done by the appellate court.

The second  ground offers  the  following proposition: "The assignee  of a litigious  credit  does not  acquire, by virtue of the assignment, a personal or real property susceptible of identification and  immediate delivery; all that he acquires are the rights of the assignor and such acquisition is subject to the lien created by law, for the benefit of the attorneys who intervened in the suit."  The  proposition is  based upon .two incorrect premises.  In the first place the case does not exactly involve an assignment of a litigious credit. It should be noted that what the parties litigated was not the judgment obtained by Bastida, part of which  was  the subject matter of the assignment, but Bastida's allegations of claims or causes of action against Menzi & Co., Inc.   The judgment was the result of the suit, but not the  suit itself.   It was the court's adjudication  of the rights and remedies invoked by Bastida, but not the credits  or claims which he intended to enforce.  In the second place, aside from section 37 of the Code of Civil Procedure which  we shall again  discuss hereafter, no law has been cited, from which it may be inferred that the fees of Attorneys Casal and Barretto enjoy preference over the claims of Levy Hermanos, Inc., and the Bank of the Philippine Islands.  On this point it is not amiss to state  that when Bastida made the assignment to Levy Hermanos,  Inc., and  executed the  mortgage in favor of  the Bank of the Philippine Islands, there was no legal bar to prevent him from executing the deeds which he signed. Neither can he be accused of fraud or deceit because he did not then know that the  judgment to be finally obtained  by him  would be insufficient to pay his attorney's fees.  We  conclude  that the second assignment of error is likewise untenable.

It is insisted in the third  and last assignment of error that our interpretation of  section 37 of the  Code of Civil Procedure is contrary to the spirit that pervades it, nullifies its  provisions and opens  the  doors to  fraud.  We  have again examined this legal  aspect of the  case and arrived at the conclusion that the ruling  is  in  accordance  with the law  in  this jurisdiction.  There is  no  question  that under  section 37  an attorney's lien in  this  jurisdiction arises  and exists  only  from the time it is  caused to be entered upon the records and notice thereof served to the adverse  party.   Nothing else may  be  inferred  from the language therein  used  which says  "from and after, but not before, the time when he shall have caused  a statement of his claim of such lien to be entered  upon the records of the court rendering such judgment or decree, or issuing such execution, and shall have caused written  notice thereof to be delivered  to the  adverse party."   The decisions of some courts of the Union therein cited are inapplicable to and cannot be invoked in favor of the motion for reconsideration  because  they are based on provisions  different from those of section 37 of our Code of Civil Procedure.

In the case of Boston &  Colorado Smelting Co. vs. Pless (10 Pac.,t 652), the Supreme Court of Colorado, interpreting section 85 of the General Statutes which acknowledges an attorney's lien without subjecting it to the necessity of causing a statement thereof to be entered upon the records and notifying the adverse party thereof, held that the last requisite was necessary.  The pertinent part of the decision reads:
"*   *  *  Nor  are Stuart  Bros,  aided by  a reliance upon  section 85 of the General Statutes, giving attorneys a lien for fees upon judgments obtained by them.  While this lien attaches to the judgment at once upon its recovery, as between  attorney  and client, so that nothing more is necessary prior to the  enforcement thereof against  the latter  by proper action, we  are inclined to the  opinion that, to hold the judgment debtor for the creditor's attorney's  fee, the former must be notified of the attorney's intention  to take  advantage  of  the  statute.  If, without knowledge of this intention, either  through a formal  notice, or through credible information derived in some other way, the debtor make a bona fide settlement of the judgment  with the creditor, by payment or otherwisef the attorney cannot look to the former for his unpaid fee.

"The statutory lien is a security of the benefit of which the attorney  may  or may not avail himself.  He is, of course, not  entitled to it unless  there remain due to him unpaid fees.  The  judgment  debtor  is a  stranger  to  the contract for fees between the judgment creditor and  his attorney; hence, in our  opinion, the former is  entitled to notice before being charged with liability in the premises. He is not bound to presume, in the absence of information on the subject, that the attorney's fee of the latter has not been paid; nor is he, by virtue of the statute, required to take notice that the attorney will elect to claim the- benefit of the lien thereby provided for.   It is  more reasonable to suppose that the  legislature intended to leave  in force the common-law rule requiring notice in such cases.  Stat- ing this common-law rule, see Whart. Ag., sees. 628, 629; Weeks, Attys., sees. 379, 384.

"We are aware  that there is at least one  state wherein, under a statute somewhat similar to our section 85, it is held that the judgment debtor is charged  without notice; but we do not feel satisfied with the reasons stated in support of this view, and have therefore declined to follow the opinions announcing it.  The position taken in some decisions that where a judgment is for costs only the record is itself notice to all parties of the attorney's lien thereon for his costs need not be here considered, because, in  the first place, we are dealing with a statute which does not refer to costs, and, secondly, such was not the judgment in the case at bar.  There  is  no pretense that actual notice of the reliance by Stuart Bros, upon the statute was given the company  until after the settlement; and  simply placing the papers above mentioned upon the files was not constructive notice to the company  of their intention in  the premises."

In the  State of Nebraska, section  8, c. 7, of the Comp. Stat. provides that: "An attorney has a lien for a general balance of compensation upon any  papers of  his  client which have come  into his possession in the course of his professional employment, upon money in his hands belonging to his client, and in the (hands of the adverse party in an action or proceeding in which the attorney was employed from the  time of giving notice of the lien  to  that party. The Supreme Court of said State, interpreting the provision in question, similar to our section 37, In the case of Elliott vs. Atkins  (42  N. W., 403-405), said:

*****  An attorney, therefore, who desires to enforce a claim for his services must file a lien to that effect; otherwise he cannot enforce a claim against the adverse party. This claim for a lien may  be filed with the papers in the case, and the adverse party will be chargeable with notice of its existence.  The existence of a contract between a client and his attorney, where there is no claim for a lien, would not be notice to the adverse  party that he intended to assert the claim against him, as it might be presumed that such attorney  intended to rely on the responsibility of his own client.  In the case at bar there is no lien claimed  or filed on behalf of the plaintiffs, and nothing to apprise the defend- ants that a claim would be asserted against them.  *   *   *"
In the State of Oregon, section 1044 of Hill's Annotated Laws contains a provision relative to an  attorney's lien, similar to section 37 of our Code  of Civil Procedure.  The Supreme  Court of said  State, interpreting said provision in Day vs. Larsen  (47 Pac, 101,  102), said:
"By section 1044 of Hill's Annotated Laws it is provided that an attorney has a lien  for  his compensation to  the extent the same may have been specially agreed on, 'from the giving notice  thereof to  the  party against whom  the judgment or decree is given, and filing the original with the clerk where such judgment  or decree  is entered and docketed.   These  words carry their meaning plain upon their face, and fix, as the time when the lien shall attach as against the judgment debtor, the giving of notice to him, and  filing the same with the clerk.  The right to ac- quire the lien is a privilege of which the attorney may avail himself, by giving and filing the  notice as required by  the statute; but  he has no lien  or claim  upon the judgment, as against the judgment debtor,  prior to that time.  As to him, the notice creates and originates  the  lien, and  the statute  specifically fixes the time  from which it shall exist. He is a stranger to the contractual relations between  the attorney and his client, and no right can be acquired against him under the statute before the prescribed notice is given. If, before that time, he makes a bona fide settlement of  the judgment with the creditor, it is clear that there is nothing in existence to which  the lien can attach, and any subsequent notice is therefore inoperative to create any liability against him.   This is in harmony with the construction of analogous statutes  in  other states.   (Henry  vs. Traynor, 42 Minn., 234; 44 N.  W., 11; Elliott vs.  Atkins, 26 Neb., 409; 42 N. W., 403; Pirie vs. Harkness, 52  N. W., 581; Smelting Co. vs. Pless, 9 Colo., 112; 10 Pac, 652.)"
In the case of Pirie vs. Harkness (52 N. W.,  581, 582), the Supreme  Court of South Dakota, interpreting the scope of section 470 of the Comp. Laws of said State, similar to section 37 of our Code of Civil Procedure, said:
"* ** *  Section 470,  Comp.  Laws,  provides  that an attorney has a lien upon 'money due his client in the hands of the adverse party   *  *  *  in an action or a proceeding in which the attorney claiming" the lien was employed, from the time of giving notice in writing to such adverse party', etc.  Now, both  of these rights exist under the statute, but each is a dormant right until asserted.  Neither judgment holder may ever  ask the court  for a  set-off, and the attorney may never take any steps to claim or  perfect his lien.  Both rights are simply possible, abstract rights, until asserted, and thus  made active and operative.  The attorney's lien attaches and becomes an  active instead of a potential right, 'from the time of giving notice in writing to the adverse party;'  *   *   *."
The above cited decisions show that in those states where provisions similar  to section 37 of the Code of Civil Procedure exist it has invariably been held that an attorney's lien exists  and  is demandable only from the time  it is caused to be entered upon the records  or notice  thereof served to the adverse party, according as the law requires one of the two conditions  or both.

Wherefore, the motion for reconsideration  is denied.

Avancena, C.J.,  Villa-Real, Abad Santos, Diaz, and Laurel, JJ., concur.



1 58 Phil., 188.

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