205 S.W.2d 332 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1947
Affirming.
This appeal involves a controversy over the allowance of attorney fees in a suit for the sale of land owned jointly by appellants Nannie Croley and Mattie Elliott (hereinafter referred to as "defendants") and appellee Maria Adkins (hereinafter referred to as "plaintiff"). Defendants are represented by attorney W. Boyd Morrow and plaintiff is represented by attorneys Bethurum. Neikirk. These attorneys have made themselves parties to this appeal.
On November 11, 1946, Bethurum Neikirk filed suit on behalf of plaintiff against defendants for the purpose of selling several tracts of land in Pulaski County owned jointly by these three parties. Each party owned an undivided one-third interest, and the action was brought under Section 490, subsection 2, Kentucky Civil Code. Defendants filed an answer and cross-petition which admitted: (1) the property was owned jointly as alleged in the petition, (2) it was in possession and could not be divided without materially impairing its value, and (3) it should be sold. The cross-petition asserted that certain large tracts of land should be divided and offered for sale in smaller parcels. Thereafter the parties pleaded back and forth, with numerous references to attorneys' fees and against whom they should be taxed.
Eventually on January 15, 1947, the parties entered into an "Agreed Judgment and Order of Sale" which provided among other things for the partition of certain lands. Thereafter the property was sold for approximately $45,000. The real estate partitioned was valued at $20,000.
Subsequently defendants' attorney moved the Court for the allowance of an attorney's fee to be taxed as *767 costs against the two defendants he represented, and later plaintiffs' attorneys moved for an allowance of an attorney's fee to be paid out of the general fund in Court. The Court allowed an aggregate fee of $2,500 to be paid out of the general fund, and adjudged that plaintiff's attorneys should receive $1,500 of said sum and defendants' attorney should receive $1,000 of said sum.
Attorneys for both sides excepted to this order and both prayed an appeal to this Court.
Defendants' attorney insists that it was improper to allow plaintiff's attorneys any fee out of the general fund because of the fact that defendants were represented by their own counsel. On the other hand, plaintiff's attorneys object to allowing defendants' attorney anything out of the general fund because throughout the pleadings in the case he has insisted that his fee be taxed as part of the costs only against the two defendants he represented. It seems to be conceded by counsel for both sides that under Sections
We have reviewed these cases, and it appears evident that in all of them substantial issues were raised and there was a real controversy between the parties. Obviously it would be inequitable to compel a party to a law suit to pay his adversaries' attorney fee when there was an actual conflict of interest.
In our opinion the rule does not apply in the present case for the reason that the parties were not engaged *768 in a truly adversary proceeding. While there were a number of pleadings on both sides, plaintiff and defendants and their counsel had identically the same objective in view and their interests in no way conflicted. As noted heretofore, the judgment in the case settling all matters (except attorneys' fees) was agreed to by counsel for all interested parties. It seems clear from the record in this case that defendants' counsel and plaintiff's counsel together represented the three owners of the property involved and together they succeeded jointly in accomplishing the results from which all three parties benefited. Therefore, we see no impropriety in the Chancellor's determination that the entire attorneys' fee should be charged against the fund in Court, and allocated on the basis of services performed.
In Goodwin's Ex'r et al. v. Goodwin et al.,
We pointed out in this opinion that the widow's counsel had actively participated in litigation which resulted in an agreed order adjudicating various property rights, and in effect he furnished services for all parties to the litigation. The opinion concluded, at page 531 of 301. Ky., at page 495 of 192 S.W.2d: "Having in mind that the fixing of counsel fees, as well as the allocation of costs, is in the judicial discretion of the court, and since the chancellor sat through the case from beginning to end, we think he was in better position to determine whether or not the services, 'primarily' for the benefit of Mrs. Goodwin, redounded to the benefit of other parties in interest. We are only to determine whether or not his conclusion abused his vested discretion. Our opinion is that it did not." See also *769
40 Am.Jur., "Partition," Section 94, page 92; and Capuccio v. Caire,
As in the Goodwin case, we have concluded that the Chancellor was authorized to allow an attorney's fee out of the general fund and require all parties to contribute thereto. Such determination appears eminently fair since each of the three interested parties sharing 1/3 of the proceeds charged with 1/3 of the total fee.
The remaining questions relating to the excessiveness of the allowance and the right of defendants' counsel to the allocation of $1,000 require but brief consideration. Section
Considering the entire record, we do not find that the Chancellor abused his discretion in either the amount of the allowance or the allocation of $1,500 to plaintiff's counsel and $1,000 to defendants' counsel.
The judgment is affirmed.