Finance Committee of Pennsylvania v. Warren

82 F. 525 | 7th Cir. | 1897

JENKINS, Circuit Judge,

after stating tlie facts, delivered tlie opinion of tlie court.

The eighty-second rule in equity prescribed by the supreme court provides that “the compensation to be allowed to every master in chancery, for his services in any particular case shall be fixed by the circuit court in its discretion, having regard to all the circumstances thereof.” Our review of the decree complained of is therefore necessarily limited to the question whether the discretion of the court has been improvidently exercised. A master in chancery occupies, *527it is true, a position of responsibility and of trust. The court looks to him to execute its decree thoroughly, accurately, and in full response to the confidence extended to him. His compensation should be measured accordingly. He should be remunerated for the actual work done, and the time employed, and the responsibility' assumed. The amount of compensation should be fixed with due regard to the magnitude of the interests involved, and to the responsibility of the position. The amount of such compensation, while it should be reasonable, and perhaps liberal, should not be exorbitant. Possibly, much ground for complaint would be avoided if the amount of compensation could be determined by some fixed standard. Yet so various and dissimilar are the services performed, and the character and extent of the responsibilities assumed, that it might work injustice to deal with such matters by any ironclad rale. The service here would seem not to have been arduous. It was all performed within a period of two months, and the time actually employed in it could not well have exceeded 10 days. The service consisted in the preparation and publication of notices of sale, attendance at the sale, the execution of a deed, the ascertainment of the proportionate amount of the bid applicable to each outstanding bond, and the stamping of such amount upon each bond. The railway in question was a small affair, being only 112 miles in length, and manifestly unreinunerative. The road was bonded for about $14,000 a mile, and could not pay interest upon its bonded debt. The court was obliged to issue receiver’s certificates to the amount of $115,000 to keep the road in proper repair, and to provide for outstanding liabilities for recent operation of the road, chargeable upon the corpus of the projierty in priority to the mortgage. It was understood to be and' was necessarily the case that the bondholders must, for their own protection, buy in the road; and, manifestly, their committee would be, as in fact it was, the only bidder at the sale. The responsibility assumed by the master was, therefore, not great. The evidence offered in respect to the value of the service dealt largely with the amount of allowances to masters upon the sale of railways in that and other federal districts. The peculiar circumstances surrounding those cases are'not disclosed, and, unless there were some extraordinary conditions existing of which we are not informed, we fear that some of these allowances were excessive. While we cannot agree with the ruling in Middleton v. Telegraph Co., 32 Fed. 524, that compensation in such cases should be measured by the standard of judicial salaries, — which are not infrequently meager, — we are also of opinion that the rule seemingly approved in Railway Co. v. Heath, 10 Blatchf. 214, Fed. Cas. No. 4,516, to treat stocks or bonds passing through the hands of the master as so much money committed to his keeping, and allowing him a percentage thereon, in analogy to the commission allowed to the clerk of the court or to an executor or administrator lor receiving and paying out money, or to a broker for the purchase and sale of stocks or bonds, might, in many instances, work out an exorbitant compensation. We are reluctant to disturb a decree of this character, when much must be largely rested in the discretion of the court below. We cannot, however, but regard *528the amount -allowed as excessive in view of the circumstances surrounding this case.

In a case in the Eastern district of Wisconsin, involving the sale of the street-railway system of the city of Milwaukee, with more lines of railway than the one in question, the road was sold for $5,000,000. The master dealt with bonds to the amount of nearly $9,000,000, and with a considerable amount of money. He was obliged to go to Hew York with respect to the stamping upon each of these bonds the proportionate amount of the bid; and other services, not required in the case here, were performed by him. There the sum of $3,500 was allowed by the court. In the case of the sale of the Louisville, New Albany & Chicago Railroad, in the district of Indiana, the road was 512 miles in extent, was sold for $3,000,000, and the master dealt with bonds to the amount of over $8,000,00(1, and was likewise required to go to the city of New York in the discharge of his duties. In that case the like sum of $3,500 was allowed. In both these cases we think the amount was fair and liberal, but not excessive. The case in hand was not nearly so important as the cases referred to; the responsibility was not nearly so great. We think that an allowance of $2,500 for the services rendered would have been a full and liberal compensation, and possibly too much. We are of opinion that any greater sum must be deemed excessive.

There was evidence pro and con with reference to an alleged agreement between counsel representing one of the complainants below and counsel for the appellants here with respect to the person who should be appointed master, and the compensation which should be paid him. We have not considered that evidence in respect to the amount of compensation, and we refer to it only to say that courts ought not to regard any such arrangement between counsel, made in advance of the appointment of the master. It is not to be tolerated that parties to a suit may hawk such employment about the street, and award it to the lowest bidder. The master is an officer of the court. He is appointed by and should be selected by the court, and 'not by the parties. The office is one of dignity and responsibility, ■and, while it is proper that the master should receive from the parties in interest all proper suggestions with reference to the manner in which he should comply with his duty, it still remains that he must determine for himself how his duty should be performed, and he owes it to the court that its orders should be carried out strictly and impartially, and not in favor of one interest against another. He occupies a quasi judicial position. He is not the servant of, nor bound to obey the orders of, any-party to the suit; and he should not become a mere dummy, to be used by interested parties to effect their purposes. When his services have been performed, it would, of course, be agreeable to the court, and relieve it of responsibility, if the parties interested could agree with the master upon an amount of compensation satisfactory to both. But in advance of the appointment such agreements are'iprproper; and in disrespect of the court.

The decree will be reversed, and'the cause remanded for further -proceedings in the court below in conformity with this opinion.

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