175 Va. 73 | Va. | 1940
delivered the opinion of the court.
As is said in the briefs of counsel for each of the litigants, the sole question presented here “is as to the propriety of the court’s action in allowing the fee complained of in this case to counsel for the plaintiffs.”
This is a lien creditors’ suit which was instituted in 1932 for the purpose of preserving the estate of the debtor, A. J. Lilliston, and subjecting it to the payment of the liens thereon according to their priorities.
“Ravenswood”, a large plantation and a part of the estate, was sold in 1920 by Miss Margaret Conquest to Lilliston, the purchase price being $70,000.00, and in her deed to the purchaser a vendor’s lien on the property was reserved for $50,000.00 (subsequently reduced to $30,000.00). The law firm of Gunter & Gunter represented Miss Conquest in this transaction as well as in the subsequent suit. Miss Conquest filed an answer in the suit, by her attorneys, and the point is made by the appellees that no objection was made to the fee allowance demand, notice of which was contained in the bill, or to the suit as affecting the enforcement of Miss Conquest’s lien. Benjamin T. Gunter, Jr., of counsel for the appellant, was appointed a special commissioner to sell “Ravenswood” at public auction, which he did, and J. Fred Edmonds became the purchaser, at the price of $12,-100.00. The sale was confirmed by the court after it had required Edmonds to waive the right of a deficiency judgment. Edmonds, by assignment of Miss Conquest, was the owner and holder of the bonds which represented the unpaid balance of the vendor’s lien.
Four years elapsed between the institution of the suit and the motion by the plaintiffs’ attorneys for the allowance of a fee which they had claimed in the bill, out of the purchase price of “Ravenswood.” The point is also made that during
An agreed statement of facts shows that the appellant was actively represented throughout the progress of the suit by his own counsel. This being true, the decree of the court allowing an attorney’s fee to the appellees to be paid out of the proceeds of the sale of the “Eavenswood” property is manifestly error. The burden of this would fall upon the appellant, which is without legal warrant, as we shall see. It is worthy of statement also that no additional property was unearthed or brought to light by the efforts of the plaintiffs’ attorneys. Their services added nothing to the Lilliston estate.
The legal principle to which this court has steadfastly adhered is aptly expressed in Barton’s Chancery Practice, vol. 1, page 200:
“It is the general rule that a creditor suing for himself and others who may come in and contribute to the expenses of the suit, institutes the proceeding for their common benefit, so that those who derive a benefit shall bear their proportion of the expenses and not throw the whole burden on one, and this rule applies to the fees of counsel, but if a creditor has his own counsel in a cause actively prosecuting it, he cannot be required to contribute to the compensation of another. In such cases the common fund cannot be charged beyond the costs fixed by law, and whatever money is to be decreed to counsel must be charged to the shares of those creditors who have employed him.” Clearly, this case comes within the exception to the general rule as stated.
See also, McCormick v. Elsea, 107 Va. 472, 59 S. E. 411; Stuart v. Hoffman, 108 Va. 307, 61 S. E. 757; Stoneburner v. Motley, 95 Va. 784, 30 S. E. 364; Dunlop v. McGehee’s Ex’r, 139 Va. 643, 124 S. E. 199.
Reversed and remanded.