81 So. 551 | Ala. | 1919
The appeal is from a decree allowing compensation to the receiver for the operation of a hotel, under the direction of the court.
The petition for compensation, after demurrer thereto was overruled, was answered, in which it was alleged that the compensation claimed was "grossly excessive; that the operation of the said Anniston Hotel has required no great amount of skill or ability, but the operation of the hotel consists in simple routine work; that no dining room has been operated by the receiver in connection with the hotel, the same being a rooming house only; that the receiver is not a hotel man or an experienced hotel man, and that his services do not command the compensation that that of an experienced hotel manager would command;" and that the receiver has not given the attention he should have given, has permitted "paper, trash, and débris" to accumulate in said hotel, and this, among other things, is a reason why the claim is excessive.
After testimony of witnesses Montgomery and Edmondson was taken in open court before the judge, and after consideration of all the evidence, Montgomery was allowed, as receiver, the sum of $200 per month, aggregating the sum of $1,600; the decree concluding that "all other questions are reserved." From such decree the appeal is prosecuted.
The test of finality of a decree to support an appeal is, not whether the cause remains in fieri in the court of equity, awaiting further proceedings to entitle the parties to their acquired right, but whether such decree ascertains and declares such rights embracing the substantial merits of the controversy, and the material issues of fact and law litigated or necessarily involved. A denial of an assignee's petition for ascertainment, by *610
reference, of his reasonable compensation, is a final decree and appealable. De Graffenried v. Breitling,
In Andrews v. Grey, 74 So. 62,1 this court said of a decree founded on testimony taken orally in open court under the provisions of Gen. Acts 1915, p. 705, that the same presumption will be indulged by the Supreme Court in favor of the chancellor's findings as are accorded the findings of a register based on oral testimony, under construction of Code, § 5955, subd. 1. Manchuria S. S. Co. v. Donald Co.,
An examination of the evidence shows the reasonable compensation to have been from $100 to $200 per month. The test of the reasonable value of such services is, not what Mr. Montgomery may have obtained for his services in some other business wholly unlike that conducted by the court through the receivership, but what the services performed in the conduct of the business are reasonably worth. In Magee v. Cowperthwaite, supra (
"There is little to be found on the subject of their [receivers'] compensation, except that it is allowed, and usually in the sound discretion of the court."
The like rule was recently announced:
"A receiver should not be allowed compensation for his services in different capacities. If he receives compensation as a receiver, it should be in lieu of compensation in other capacities. Battaile v. Fisher,
Were this not the rule, courts of chancery would be seriously inconvenienced in the efficient administration of such trust estates through the officers of the court. Coffey v. Gay, supra,
"The court has represented the whole estate, and has stood in the position of a trustee of it, and the consignee was the paid agent of the court to manage the estate which was in the court's hands. The moneys due to the consignee are moneys due to the court itself, and as the court has in its hands moneys belonging to the estate, on account of which it has made the payments, it must have a right to repay itself its advances out of these moneys. This right has priority over the costs of suit, for as to a fund in the hands of a trustee, his expenses must be the first charge on the fund." Morison v. Morison, 7 De Gex M. G. 214, 226.
Mr. High says:
"In passing upon the compensation of a receiver, an appellate court will ordinarily defer much to the judgment of the court below by which the receiver was appointed, that court having had the supervision of his conduct." Page 916.
This proposition is well fortified with authority. Morgan, Trustee, v. Hardee, Adm'r,
Mr. Clark thinks that —
In the absence of legislation regulating the compensation of a receiver, "No strict rule can be laid down fixing the exact amount that should be allowed a receiver as commissions or fees. A number of cases allow 5 per cent. upon the receipts and disbursements of a business as a fair remuneration. Yet 10 per cent. has been allowed and not set aside by the upper court because as a number of considerations were present which might entitle the receiver to more than 5 per cent., and the upper courts are not disposed to set aside the judgment of the master and the lower court as to the amount. The amount to be allowed is within the discretion of the court appointing the receiver, although an abuse of discretion or a refusal of the court to allow any commissions or fees may be reviewed by the upper court. For the services of receiver the law recognizes the justice of compensation measured by the circumstances of the case." Section 826-a.
The case of Henry v. Henry,
We find no abuse of discretion by the trial court in fixing the amount indicated in the decree as the just and reasonable compensation of this officer of that court, for the discharge of the duties imposed upon him as receiver of the hotel in question.
The decree is affirmed.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and MAYFIELD and SOMERVILLE, JJ., concur.