The only question raised by the bill of exceptions, as conceded by the defendant in his brief, is whether the executory contract upon which the plaintiff depends was champertous and illegal.
The original act by which the Court of Commissioners of Alabama Claims was constituted was approved by the President of the United States on June 23, 1874, and the same tribunal was re-established by the act approved June 5, 1882. 18 U. S. Sts. at Large, 245. 22 U. S. Sts. at Large, 98. The contract here in question was made on the 21st of June, 1882, a few days after the passage of the latter act. We shall have no occasion to consider whether this contract would have been voidable by reason of champerty if the services to be rendered or advances to be made which it contemplated were to have been rendered or made in a strictly legal proceeding, such as a suit at law by the defendant against another party, and whether it would, under such circumstances, have come within the definitions of champerty or maintenance as these are found in our decisions. Swett v. Poor, 11 Mass. 549. Brinley v. Whiting, 5 Pick. 348. Scott v. Harmon, 109 Mass. 237. Blaisdell v. Ahern, 144 Mass. 393.
*20Champerty is a species of maintenance, and is so termed because, by a champertous contract, the money or land to be obtained by legal proceedings is to be divided between the party bringing and the party promoting the suit. Maintenance is an offence by the common law and by the St. 32 Hen. VIII. c. 9, which in Brinley v. Whiting, ubi supra, is said to have been adopted in this Commonwealth. It is defined by Blackstone as “ an officious intermeddling in a suit that no way belongs to one, by maintaining or assisting either party with money or otherwise, to prosecute or defend it.”- 4 Bl. Com. 134. The grounds upon which contracts were held voidable for champerty or maintenance, as against the policy of the law, were, that there might be combinations of powerful individuals to oppress others which might even influence or overawe the court, and that they tended to the promotion and enforcement of unfounded claims, to disturb the public repose, to promote litigation, and to breed strife and quarrels among neighbors. With the progress of society these reasons have everywhere lost much of their force, and the whole doctrine on this subject has been rejected in several States of the Union as antiquated and incongruous in the existing state of society, notably in New Jersey, Texas, California, and Mississippi. Without desiring to modify or in any way recede from the doctrine on this- subject, as it has heretofore been held in Massachusetts, we see no reason for Its further extension.
Neither the definition of champerty nor the reasons why it was held to be an offence have any proper application to a proceeding such as that by which the defendant, under his contract with the plaintiff, sought to enforce his claim against the government of the United States. There was no suit to be brought, nor any defendant in the proposed proceeding, in the same sense that there is in a contested cause at law or in equity. Acknowledging its liability to certain classes of our citizens who had suffered by the depredations on our commerce, during the civil war, to the extent of the sum received from the government of Great Britain, which had been held responsible therefor, the United States ordered this sum to be distributed among them. The first class of claimants described by the act was to receive its claims in full if this amount would satisfy them, otherwise *21pro rata. This class being satisfied, the second class was to receive its claims in full, if the amount remaining would satisfy them, otherwise pro rata. The judgments rendered were to be paid from the Treasury of the United States, through the officers of that department. These judgments were to be rendered, and the distribution was to be made, after hearing, upon proper notice, all parties who should seek to bring themselves within the classes described in 'the act.
While the commissioners were called a court, and were clothed with many of the attributes of one for the purpose of conducting their investigations efficiently, many of the characteristics of a judicial tribunal were wanting. It was provided that an officer, appointed by the Attorney General of the United States and acting under his supervision, should attend their sessions, but it was only to see that pretended claims were not allowed, to the injury of those entitled to the benefit of the fund, and thus that there was a fair division of it. The proceeding before this tribunal was an inquest, as distinguished from a trial or a lawsuit. The action of the tribunal was that of a committee to which the inquiry as to the division of the fund was confided. There could be no final action as to any claim, until it was decided what claims should be allowed to participate in the division. There was no appeal, either in law or fact, from any of the decisions of the commissioners. There was no contest to ensue between contending parties before it, and no strife which could be stirred up between them. Indeed, if it was found by them that a particular loss was the proper subject of a legal claim, but that there was a controversy as to • who was entitled to the claim and to receive the benefit of .it, the commissioners, following Comegys v. Vasse, 1 Pet. 193, held that they could not decide it. While they could decide conclusively upon the amount and validity of claims, they could not determine the conflicting rights of parties to the sum awarded. That was to be finally determined in some other tribunal. Hackett, Geneva Award. McLeane v. United States, Davis’s Report of Decisions of Commissioners, 112. Heard v. Sturgis, 146 Mass. 545.
The plaintiff by his contract proposed to be a party, as the representative of the defendant, to this inquiry as to the amount and validity of his claim only. Ño suit was to be brought, no *22litigation initiated, by him. His agreement was not, therefore, voidable, in our view, because his contemporaneous agreement for the fees he was to receive for his services and expenses was for a sum equal to nine per cent of the claim which might be recovered.
In Wright v. Tebbitts, 91 U. S. 252, it was held that a commission called together in pursuance of a treaty stipulation to settle and adjust disputed claims, with a view to their ultimate payment and satisfaction, is for that purpose a quasi court, and that there is nothing illegal, immoral, or against public policy in an agreement by an attorney at law to present and prosecute a claim before it, either at a fixed compensation or at a reasonable percentage on the amount recovered. The commission referred to in this decision differed in no essential respect from the Court of Commissioners of Alabama Claims. To the same effect is Wylie v. Coxe, 15 How. 415. Stanton v. Embrey, 93 U. S. 548, holds that a contract to prosecute a claim before one of the executive departments for a contingent fee is not illegal. Nor do we think any distinction can be made because, in the cases cited, it does not appear that any expenses were to be paid by the attorney, which to some extent appears to have been contemplated in the present case.
The contract in the case at bar, while made in Massachusetts, was to be performed in Washington, before a tribunal of the United States. Exceptions overruled.