70 Ala. 534 | Ala. | 1881
Grimball and Moore severally filed exceptions,
In the condition in which Mrs. G-rimball’s estate was left at her death, and the conflicting claims asserted to her property by her administrator, Bison, her husband, Grimball, and her next of ldn, it was not only the privilege, but the duty of the trustee, to obtain a' judicial construction of Dr. Moore’s will, and directions as to the proper administration and disposition of the trust property in his hands. His relation to the property was that of an indiffererlt stakeholder, solicitous, not that one party or the other should succeed to the ownership, but that in the settlement of the trust the property and funds should pass into the right hands. It therefore became his duty to file a bill, informing the court.of the facts out of which the doubt and contest arose, the riyal claimants, and asking the court to interpret the will, under whose provisions the property was held, and to direct him to whom he must surrender the subject-matter of the trust. In this it was 'his duty to act in good faith, so presenting the facts of the case, as that each rival claimant should have the opportunity of having his claim properly considered. It was neither his duty, nor his right, to espouse the cause of one claimant, to the prejudice of another. Stern neutrality was his duty, and equal indifference to the success of either claimant. As we have said, his only permissible interest and solicitude were, that’the questions should be properly presented before the proper court, so that justice should be- administered according to law,'and to the rights of the several parties. To the extent of properly presenting the questions of doubt and controvesy before the court, and of having them properly represented there, or before any tribunal to which the ' controversy presented by his bill might.be carried, he. is entitled to credit for proper counsel-fees, incurred and expended by him. This.is legitimate expense of the administration of the trust, and a proper charge on the' trust fund'.—Pinckard v. Pinckard, 24 Ala. 250 ; Harris v. Parker, 41 Ala. 604; Mundin v. Bailey, at present term; Rogers v. Ross, 1 Johns. Ch. 608.
If counsel in .this case went beyond the line marked out above, and became the advocates of one of the several claimants, against the asserted right of some other-claimant, to.-that extent -they- were not counsel of the trustee, and, for such services]'would ■ have no-proper charge against the trustee or
• Under the principles above declared, Humes & Gordon, under their stipulated fee of five hundred dollars, were bound to conduct the case of the bill filed by them to a final decree in the Chancery Court. It can not be regarded as compensation to them for their services in resisting, in the several courts, the attempt of Grimball to remove the cause into the Circuit Court of the United States, or the appeal of the original cause to this court, so far as that appeal involved the interests and duty of the trustee, nor for services rendered Cruse in making his several settlements as trustee. Neither can it embrace services, rendered in other matters, not growing out of that suit, if there were such other services rendered. All of the above are proper charges against the whole trust fund, and should be assessed pro rata against the two funds — the landed interests, including their rents and profits, and the personal estate, including its accumulations. This, because the real estate goes to the brothers and sister, as heirs at law, and the personal estate goes to the personal representative.
Her brothers and sister claimed that, under the will of Dr. Moore, Mrs. Grimball took no interest in the corpus of the property she acquired thereunder, but only the rents, income
For Mr. Grimball it was contended that, inasmuch as Mrs. Grimball died intestate, and a resident of New York, the succession to her personal estate was controlled by the laws of New York; that under those laws, the husband is entitled to have the administration.of his wife’s estate; that by due appointment he had become and was the domiciliary administrator of her estate, and was therefore entitled to her personal assets; that, being authorized to demand and recover her1’personal assets, she dying without issue, no one could assert a paramount right to them, and the law converted this right of possession in him into an absolute title, because no one could recover them from him. Part of this claim rested on the contention, that imder Dr. Moore’s will the title of Mrs. Grim-ball was a fee in the lands, and an absolute title to the personalty, to be cut down to a life-estate in the event she left issue; and that, dying without such issue, the absolute right to the property remained in her estate. It was also contended for Mr. Grimball, that he was entitled to a life-estate in the lands, of which his wife died seized. For Mr. Rison, the administrator, it was contended, that he, as the resident administrator, was entitled to the personal assets, for purposes of administration. This claim, pro tatito, harmonized with the contention of Mr. Grimball, that his wife had died the absolute owner of the property. All these questions were raised, and discussed with great ability and research, in the trial of the cause made by the bill, which was filed by Oruse,'to obtain a construction of the will of Dr. Moore, and for directions.
In the preparation and trial of this cause, Oruse, the trustee, was representéd by Humes & Gordon. David Moore first, and Harris, his guardian, after the said David had been adjudged non compos, also employed Humes & Gordon to represent his interests in the trial of said issues. Walker & Shelby were employed by Mrs. Rhett, to represent her interests in the same issues. Samuel Moore had no counsel, but, aided by the advice
In January, 1881, in response to a motion therefor, the chancellor made a decretal order, and, among other things, “ ordered and decreed, that it be, and is hereby, referred to Robert H. Wilson, as special register in this case, to ascertain and report, as soon as practicable, what would be a reasonable compensation to Messrs. Humes & Gordon and Walker & Shelby for services aa solicitors of all the parties defendants in this cause (except John Grimball), in such part of said cause ás has been finally disposed of by the Supreme Court.” The questions disposed of by this court were the interpretation of Dr. Moore’s will, the order that the lands be surrendered to the brothers and sisters, heirs at law, and that the personal property bo turned over to Rison, the administrator. The special register reported, “that the real estate is of the value of thirty thousand dollars, and that a reasonable compensation to be made to the solicitors of record for all the defendants (except John Grimball), for their services in this branch of the case, would be, as shown by the testimony of experts learned in the law, an amount, in the opinion of said experts, varying from four thousand dollars down to less than ten per-cent, upon the value of such recovery. I report the sum of three thousand dollars, as reasonable compensation to said solicitors, Walker & Shelby and Humes & Gordon, for the service in this branch of the case.” The contest over the real estate was a claim by Grimball that he was entitled to the life-estate, which was resisted by the heirs at law. As we understand the report of the register, he finds thirty thousand dollars to be the value of the land in fee, and does not report the value of the life-estate. The final ruling of the chancellor, in reference to this item, is as follows: “ It is further ordered and decreed, that the exception to the register’s report, as to the allowance of $3,000 to Messrs. Walker & Shelby and Humes & Gordon, attorneys, for their services as shown, be also sustained, and their motion to be allowéd the sum of four thous- and dollars, as a reasonable fee, ought to have been allowed. It
There are cases, such as creditors’ bills, bills to declare property subject to the payment of debts, and bills of kindred character, wliere the result of the litigation and judgment is to bring to light, and place within the control of the court, a fund which, without such legal proceedings, would be beyond the reach of creditors; cases in which outside creditors, if they wish to share in the fund, must come in, and avail themselves of the decree of condemnation, and, necessarily, of the professional labor and research which have discovered the fund, and made it available. In such cases, all who cbme in, and share the benefits of such recovery, must take them cum onere. They must contribute to the expense, as a condition upon which they can claim to share in the benefits.—Mason v. Codwise, 6 Johns. Ch. 297; Brown v. Bates, 10 Ala. 432.
The principle stated above is not applicable to this case. The purpose of the bill filed by Cruse was to obtain a construction of Dr. Moore’s will, and directions as to the descent and distribution of the property. A proper decree in that cause necessarily determined to whom the lands should go. If some of the parties asserting claim to the property employed counsel to press an interpretation of the will fa voidable to their views and interests, this was their act, their contract; and if others, standing in like interest, were benefited by the decision thus obtained, we know of no rule of law for fastening a liability on them for any part of the fee. Few' decisions are rendered, affecting property rights, that do not in some respects benefit others, who are not parties to the suit or the retainer. To travel beyond the parties making the contract, in search of an implied promise to pay for such incidental benefit, would introduce a new and dangerous principle in implied contracts, the extent of which it is difficult to conjecture. In Roselius v. Delachaise, 5 La. Ann. 481, the principle declared is well expressed in the head-note, as follows: “ However valuable the services of an attorney may have been to a party in a suit, in which he represented others having a similar interest, he can not recover a fee from a party who has not employed him.” In 1 Wait’s Act. & Def. 456, speaking of the right of an attorney to recover for services rendered, the author uses this language: “ He can not recover of his client for professional services, without proving a retainer; and even
There are cases, where the court, having the fund within its control, or otherwise having the power to do so, will, on proper application, aid and protect an attorney in the assertion of his claim and lien for services rendered.—Ex parte Lehman, Durr & Co., 59 Ala. 631; Warfield v. Campbell, 38 Ala. 527; McPherson v. Cox, 96 U. S. 404; Hunt v. McClanahan, 1 Heisk. 503. That question is not presented in the item of charge we are considering.
Let the costs of appeal in the court below and in this court be paid as follows: one-half by Cruse individually, one-third by Ilumes & Gordon, and one-sixth by Walker & Shelby.
Reversed and remanded.