delivered the opinion of the Court.
Section 500 of the World War Veterans’ Act
1
(as applicable here) prohibits the recognition of attorneys or
A committee ,(guardian appointed by a New York state court) for an insane veteran retained an attorney to prosecute the rights of the incompetent on a War Risk Insurance contract. The New York court was petitioned for an attorney’s fee of $3,000. Upon hearing, it appeared that the attorney had performed services of an investiga-
Respondent seeks to sustain the $1,500 fee upon the theory that the general power of the New York court to fix fees for services rendered an incompetent under that court’s jurisdiction is not subject to the limitation of $10 for fees as provided in § 500. He urges that the present case is controlled by the decision in
Hines
v.
Stein,
Section 500 is one in a series of congressional efforts to limit fees of claim agents and attorneys in the prosecution of veterans’ insurance and related claims. Shortly after the United States entered the World War, Congress provided a comprehensive statutory plan of War Risk Insurance for soldiers and sailors. 3 Section 13 of that statute contained this provision: “The Director shall adopt reasonable and proper rules . . ., to regulate the matter of the compensation, if any, but in no case to exceed ten per centum, to be paid to claim agents and attorneys for services in connection with” collection of soldiers’ and sailors’ benefits.
May 20, 1918, Congress amended § 13 of the 1917 Act.
4
The House, report shows that this amendment was strongly urged by the Secretary of the Treasury, then administering the World War Veterans’ Act.
5
The 1918
“We find no reason which would justify disregard of the plain language of the section under consideration. It declares that any person who receives a fee or compensation in respect of a claim under the Act except as therein provided shall be deemed' guilty of a misdemeanor. The only compensation which it permits a claim agent or attorney to receive where no legal proceeding has been commenced is three dollars for assistance in preparation and execution of necessary papers. And the history of the enactment indicates plainly enough that Congress did not fail to choose apt language to express its purpose.” 6 (Italics supplied.)
In 1926, Congress enacted additional legislation for the specific protection of incompetent veterans from illegal or excessive fees where guardians had been appointed by any court — state or federal.
7
Congress declared that “whenever it appears that any guardian, curator, conservator or other person, in the opinion of the Administrator, is not properly executing or has not properly executed the duties of his trust or has collected or paid, or is attempting to collect or pay, fees, commissions or allowances that are inequitable or
in excess of those allowed by law for the duties performed . .
., then and in
The history of § 500 manifests beyond doubt the clear establishment of a public policy against the payment of fees for prosecution of veterans’ claims in excess of those fixed by statute. Collection of a greater fee than that fixed in the statute is made a crime, and this Court has sustained a conviction under the statute. 9 Contracts for the collection of fees in excess of valid statutory limitations and for services validly prohibited by statute cannot stand, whether made with a competent veteran or the guardian of an incompetent veteran. Nor can any court having jurisdiction over an incompetent award a fee in violation of a valid statute. Congress clearly intended to protect all veterans, competent and incompetent, in all courts, state and federal, against the imposition or payment of fees in excess of the amount fixed by statute. In furtherance of this policy the Administrator of Veterans’ Affairs was charged with the express duty of appearing in all courts where it appears that “any guardian ... or other person ... is attempting to collect fees ... in excess of those allowed by law.” The progressive strengthening of this particular legislative policy precludes any probability that Congress intended to exempt mental incompetents from its protection, and Congress alone is vested with constitutional power to determine the wisdom of this policy.
No court has rendered a judgment or decree in favor of the incompetent veteran and against the Government, in which the court as a part of its decree determined and allowed a reasonable fee for the attorney of the veteran. In the absence of such a judgment and decree an attorney’s fee of more than $10 is contrary to the controlling congressional enactment. The judgment below being for more than this amount is unauthorized and the cause is
Reversed.
Notes
“Amount permitted to be paid agents or attorneys; solicitation, etc., of unauthorized fees or compensation; punishment. Except in the event of legal proceedings under section 19, Title I of this Act, no claim agent or attorney except the recognized representatives of the American Red Cross, the American Legion, the Disabled
The Administrator appealed and the Appellate Division affirmed.
c. 105, 40 Stat. 398 (October, 1917).
c. 77, 40 Stat. 555.
House Report No. 471 from the Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, 65th Cong., 2nd Session. A part of the letter of the Secretary of the Treasury contained in the Report was as follows: “The evils of the situation are pressing. Unscrupulous attorneys and claim agents are circularizing prospective claimants . . . The heartlessness and rapacity of these persons knows no bounds. In some instances their break-neck rush for employment has led them to the length of crucifying the wives and mothers of those in the service by false announcements that their husbands or sons have already fallen, and in almost all cases they are seeking to mulct the unwary out of hundreds of dollars for services that are either
Margolin
v.
United States,
c. 723, 44 Stat. 792; c. 10, 38 U. S. C. 450.
In 1935, Congress added the proviso that “ . . . the Administrator is hereby authorized and empowered to appear or intervene by his duly authorized attorney in any court as an interested party in any litigation instituted by himself or otherwise, directly affecting money paid to such fiduciary [guardian] under this section.” c. 510, 49 Stat. 607, 608.
Margolin v. United States, supra.
Margolin
v.
United States, supra; Calhoun
v.
Massie,
Claflin
v.
Houseman,
