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Reports of Cases in the High Court of Chancery of Maryland 1846-1854
Volume 200, Volume 3, Page 558   View pdf image (33K)
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558 INDEX.
ASSIGNMENTS IN FAVOR OF CREDITORS.—Continued.
the proceeds, 1st, to the payment of costs and commissions, and 2d, to
the full payment of such creditors, named in an annexed schedule, as as-
sent and release within a fixed time, " if the fund be sufficient for that
purpose, and the balance, if any," to one of the grantors and his repre-
sentatives, " but rateably and proportionably, according to the amount of
the claims of each of said creditors, if the fund be insufficient to pay the
whole;" provided, the shares of the non-assenting creditors " shall not
be distributed among the others," but shall be held by the trustees, " sub-
ject to the future order and control of" the said grantor, is valid. Hol-
lins vs. Mayer et al., 343.
2. The fund not proving sufficient to pay the assenting creditors in full, they
can only receive dividends, in the proportion that their claima bear to the
whole amount of claims specified in the schedule, and the surplus must
be paid to the grantor. Ib.
3. The non-assenting creditors cannot claim this surplus, because they would
then receive the same benefit under the deed as the assenting creditors,
without complying with its terms, which would destroy a material stipu-
lation of the deed, and defeat one of the principal inducements to its exe-
cution. Ib.
ASSUMPSIT.
See LIMITATIONS, S.
ATTORNEY, POWERS OF, &c.
1. An attorney, who has a claim for collection, cannot, without the authority
of hi* client, take a bond or anything else but money, in satisfaction of
the debt. Kent vs. Ricards, 392.
2. But the power of the attorney over the conduct of (he cause, is coextensive
with that of his client; be may agree not to demand a judgment, or stipu-
late for a cessat executio, and any violation of this agreement will give the
opposite party title to relief, as if the agreement was made with the ex-
press authority of the client. Ib.
3. When an appearance of an attorney is entered on the record, it is always
considered that it is by the authority of the party, and whatever is done
in the progress of the cause by such attorney, is considered as done by
the party, and binding upon him. Ib.
4. The plaintiff's attorney agreed with defendant, first, that the suit should
not be further prosecuted until there was an ascertained deficiency in
certain assignments which he received from the latter, to pay the claim
against him. Secondly, when judgment was entered, be agreed with de-
fendant's attorney that it should be stricken out, if objected to by defen-
dant. And thirdly, when so objected to, he assured defendant the judg-
ment should make no difference in the collection of the debts assigned,
and that no execution should be issued upon it until such debts could be
collected. HELD—
That it was clearly within the scope of the authority of the attorney to
make this agreement, and equity will interfere by injunction, to pre-
vent the premature enforcement of the judgment. Ib.
5. An administratrix employed an attorney to collect certain claims due the
estate of the intestate; and suits were instituted upon some, and judg-

 
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Reports of Cases in the High Court of Chancery of Maryland 1846-1854
Volume 200, Volume 3, Page 558   View pdf image (33K)
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