49 S.E. 161 | N.C. | 1904
There were three actions pending in the name of H. E. Rhea, Admx., v. R.R. Rawls et al. These were consolidated into one action. There were three other actions, Buchanan v. Rhea, Admx.; Asheville Tobacco Warehouse Co. v.H. E. Rhea, Admx., et al., and Summey v. Rhea, Admx., et al. The plaintiff, Cobb, having been allowed fees as referee and as arbitrator in said several causes years ago, and the settlement of the estate having been unaccountably delayed, made a motion in each of said four actions that the administratrix, Rhea, pay the reference fees as a preferred debt. The four motions were consolidated, and from the judgment thereon the administratrix appeals. This not being an action, but a motion in the cause, the appeal should regularly have been entitled by the name of the first action in which the motion was made, as is the practice in taxing a prosecutor with costs (S. v. Hamilton,
In Buchanan v. Rhea, Admx., there was judgment at Fall Term, 1893, that plaintiff recover of the administratrix $3,018.60, with interest, etc., "and the costs of this action, in which costs shall be included the sum of $100 allowed to T. H. Cobb for his services as such herein rendered." In Asheville Tobacco Warehouse Co. v. Rhea, Admx., a similar judgment for recovery of a debt, with interest and costs, was rendered, adding as above a recovery by plaintiff of "the costs of this action, including the sum of $100 to T. H. Cobb, referee." In Summey v. Rhea, Admx., judgment was rendered at December Term, 1895. "By consent, T. H. Cobb, referee herein, is hereby allowed $300 for his services as such referee and to be paid out of the assets of H. K. Rhea, deceased, and as part of the costs of this action and to be taxed therein." The three actions pending in the name of H. E. Rhea, Admx., v. Rawls et al. having been (297) consolidated at December Term, 1895, the judgment included an allowance of $1,000 to T. H. Cobb as arbitrator, subject to a credit of $300 already paid, "leaving due him $700 in this judgment, and as between H. E. Rhea, administratrix of H. K. Rhea, H. E. Rhea individually, and R. A. Rawls, said $700 shall be adjusted in the proportions in said award directed." The award thus made a part of the judgment in paragraph 13 thereof adjudged the $700 to be paid as follows: "350 by H. E. Rhea individually; R. A. Rawls $350, to be credited with $150, leaving $200 due to him, and $300 by H. E. Rhea, administratrix of H. K. Rhea, of which $150 has been paid, leaving balance of $150 due by her as administratrix." *227
Originally, under The Code, sec. 533, referees' fees were taxed, like other costs, against the losing party, but by amendment (Laws 1889, ch. 37) the court was authorized to apportion them, in its discretion. Clark's Code (3 Ed.), p. 714. A practice has grown up, owing to such delays as this, of granting judgment for referee's fee, whether awarded against one party or divided between them, and issuing execution at once. There is nothing to be said against this, and frequently a similar order is render for other costs, especially when a continuance is granted upon payment of costs. The question is not of ordering payment, but whether such order can be made a preferred debt against an estate.
By above summary it will be seen there are judgments against the administratrix for $100 each as part of plaintiff's recovery of costs in first two cases, Buchanan v. Rhea, Admx., and Asheville Tobacco Co. v.Rhea, Admx., also in Summey v. Rhea, Admx., $300, "to be paid out of assets of H. K. Rhea, deceased, and as part of the costs of this action, and to be taxed therein"; and finally, in the consolidated cases of Rhea,Admx., v. Rawls, a "balance of $150 due by her as administratrix," making a total of $650 adjudged against the administratrix as cost. The apportionment of referee's fees is a final judgment both as (298) to the amount and the apportionment, and rests in the discretion of the judge making the allowance, subject to exception and review by appeal in case of abuse. Such order cannot be changed by a subsequent coordinate judge. "There is no appeal from one Superior Court judge to another." May v. Lumber Co.,
The only remaining question is whether such judgment for referee's fees is a preferred debt. Referee's fees, by the statute, and also the decisions(Wall v. Covington,
Error.
Cited: Horner v. Water Co.,