176 Ga. 199 | Ga. | 1933
Two persons operating as '“croppers” as that term is defined in the Civil Code, § 3707, after the crops had been “laid by,” were convicted of penal offenses and sentenced to work on the chain-gang. While so confined, the croppers instituted suit against the proprietor of the land, seeking appointment of a receiver to gather and market the crops and distribute the proceeds in accordance with the contract between the parties, and for injunction to prevent the proprietor from gathering and appropriating the crops to his own use. At an interlocutory hearing the proprietor was appointed “to oversee and superintend the gathering and marketing” of the crops, and was directed to keep a record and make return to the court “of all the doings, receipts, and disbursements of said receiver.” The proprietor gathered and marketed the crops, made division thereof in accordance with the cropper contract, charged the croppers’ share with the costs of gathering and marketing, applied the balance to payment for supplies furnished to the croppers, and made his report to the' court, showing the total amount paid out by the receiver and charged to the croppers to be $583.04 and the a'mount collected by the receiver to be $523.78, thus leaving a balance due by the croppers of $59.26. Objections were filled to the report. The case as made by the objections to the report was submitted to a jury. On the verdict a decree was entered, August 5, 1931, declaring that all accounts were even as between the parties, and by a separate order dated August 15, 1931, it was directed that the plaintiffs pay “one half of the cost of court” and that the defendant pay the other half. There was no exception to the verdict or the decree. On August 18, 1931, the attorney of record for the plaintiffs presented his petition to the judge for an allowance of attorney’s fees for services performed in the cause, on the ground “that through his efforts the estate” of the plaintiffs “was administered” by the court, “which resulted in a large sum of money being in the hands of the receiver,” the defendant; that petitioner secured for plaintiffs substantial relief in said cause; and that his services benefited the estate, and were of value to the court in the administration of the affairs of the receivership. The
1. There is no merit in the motion to dismiss the bill of exceptions on the ground that it fails to have attached a brief of the evidence introduced in the trial of the main case.
2. As against the defendant the judgment for one half of the attorney’s fees was general, and was not restricted to payment from any funds in court, produced by the services of the attorney which were beneficial to the defendant. In the circumstances the defendant was not liable for any part of the attorney’s fees under the Civil Code, § 4392, referred to in Mohr-Weil Lumber Co. v. Russell, 109 Ga. 579 (34 S. E. 1005), nor under §§ 5423, 5488, 5489. See generally, on the subject, Keating v. Fuller, 151 Ga. 66 (3) (105 S. E. 844) ; Buckwalter v. Whipple, 115 Ga. 484 (3) (41 S. E. 1010) ; Alexander v. A. & W. P. R. Co., 113 Ga. 193 (38 S. E. 772, 54 L. R. A. 305); 2 R. C. L. 1052, § 136.
■Judgment reversed.