177 F. 573 | D. Mass. | 1910
This is a petition of the clerk that he be allowed a statutory commission of 1 per cent, on the sum of $91,-552.27, accumulated as herein set out. The claim is purely statutory, and rests on sections 995 and 828, Rev. St. (U. S. Comp. St. 1901, pp. 711, 635). Section 995 is as 'follows:
“All moneys paid into any court of the United States, or received by the officers thereof, in any cause pending or adjudicated in such court, shall be forthwith deposited with the Treasurer, an Assistant Treasurer, or a designated depositary of the United States, in the name and to the credit of such court: Provided, that nothing herein shall be construed to prevent the delivery of any such money upon security, according to r -veement of parties, under the direction of the court.”
Section 828 relates to the fees of the clerk, and contains the following :
“For receiving, keeping, and paying out money, in pursuance of any statute or order of court, one per centum on the amount so received, kept, and paid.”
The entire fund to which the petition relates was $218,369.42. From this fund there have been paid, by special orders of this court, various sums as follows:
Patterson & Major......................... $65,000 00
Henry A. Wyman................................................ 5,500 00
Whipple, Sears & Ogden......................................... 5,655 26
Morse & Friedman.............................................. 10,066 18
P>. G. Davis..................................................... 1,864 66
Hiram M. Burton and Arthur A. Folsom......................... 813 10
A. S. Hall...................................................... 107 80
James H. Hoffecker, Jr.......................................... 160 04
B. Jj. M., Tower Adm’rs.'............... 570 67
Walter K. Barton..................... 1,305 77
$91,552 27
• The present petition relates directly only to the total amount paid out, namely, $91,552.27; but the entire amount, $218,369.42, may be
The fund in question was deposited by a receiver appointed by this court in the National Shawmut Bank, which hank is not a depositary designated by the court in accordance with section 995, Rev. St., which we have cited, and the money was not deposited in accordance with the provisions of that section ; nor was the drawing out of the funds to the extent which we have mentioned done in compliance with section 996 of the Revised Statutes as amended. That section is limited to money deposited as provided in section 995. The fund was a part of a fund in the hands of a receiver appointed by this court. The receiver had been discharged as to all assets except this particular fund; but the receivership was expressly retained as to it, and the moneys were deposited in the National Shawmut Bank under an order of court, of which the part material hereto was as follows:
“It is further ordered that the balance of money in the hands of the receiver, so far as subject to the jurisdiction of this court, be transferred to and deposited forthwith in the National Shawmut Bank of Boston on such terms, as to interest as the receiver may best be able to arrange, and that said deposit stand to the credit of the receiver, subject to checks from time to time drawn by the receiver and countersigned by a judge of litis court, and be checked out only in that maimer.”
Under the provision of section 828, Rev. St., which is the only authority on which the clerk’s right to a commission rests, four things must he combined, namely: First, receiving; second, keeping; third, paying out; and, fourth, in pursuance of a statute or order of court. The order of court exists; blit the clerk neither received, kept, nor paid out. The deposit was in the name and to the credit of the receiver, and not, as required by section 995, “in the name and to the credit of” the court. So far as any order of the court called for by section 996 is concerned, there is no specific requirement that there should he separate orders or any formal order with reference to the drawing out of the fund; but, as the checks were to he countersigned by a judge, it is plain, that such orders were contemplated, and such orders were in fact made. Consequently, the fourth requirement of section 828 is found here. On the other hand, as the clerk did not receive, he did not keep; and, as the checks were to be countersigned by the judge, and, of course, drawn by the receiver, the clerk had no part in “paying out.”
There can be no doubt that he entered all the orders relating to the disbursement of the fund in question, and also assisted the court in keeping due record of disbursements, so that the court would not countersign checks improvidently drawn by the receiver; but this was only a part of his clerical duty, and cannot be said to have had any proper relation to technically “receiving, keeping, or paying out,” in the sense of the statute. If the case were left merely on this statement, it might be regarded as too technical; but the underlying distinction is that, on one side, sections 995, 996, and, consequently, 828, relate to moneys which are required by statute to be deposited in ac
Some suggestions have been made that what has been accomplished by the clerk, although in the line of his clerical duty, is yet of somewhat an extraordinary character, and that the clerk might be entitled to an allowance on that account in accordance with some decisions which have been cited to us. Without expressing any opinion on that proposition, we will only add that the petition before us is not framed in that aspect, and that a petition framed in that aspect, if offered, would come up more properly after the entire fund of $218,369.42 is substantially disposed of, so that it could be examined in the light of the entire history thereof, rather than in a fragmentary way.
The petition filed by the clerk on November 22, 1909, for an allowance of commissions, as amended, is dismissed.