12 F. Cas. 488 | D. Nev. | 1873
This is a petition by counsel of certain creditors for the allowance of a counsel fee out of the fund upon this state of facts: Some fifty creditors proved claims against the estate with security, the security in each case consisting of a lien given by a statute of this state for their wages as laborers.
I hesitated at first about refusing to allow
This application ought in strictness to have been made to the court on the hearing of the original petition. That petition, Tinder the bankrupt act [of 1SG7 (14 Stat. 517)], was heard and determined as in a court of equity, and was, practically, a suit in equity to avoid the liens. The question then would have been, and now really is, whether the lien creditors, the respondents, then were entitled to tax this fee as costs. It is clear that the court then could not have lawfully allowed any other fee to be taxed than the twenty dollars given by statute as solicitor’s fee upon a final hearing in equity. The law is imperative that “no other compensation shall be taxed and allowed.” 10 Stat. 161.
Whenever the courts of bankruptcy have allowed a counsel fee out of the fund, it has been, universally, upon the principle that the services were rendered for the benefit of the fund out of which payment is asked. The creditor who files a petition for an adjudication of bankruptcy against a debtor, if successful, raises a fund in which all other creditors share with him pro rata, and the courts uniformly allow him, out of the fund which is the result of his exertions, his costs and reasonable expenses, including a counsel fee. Such an allowance has often been made in this court, and is, I think, in accord with the practice of courts of equity in analogous cases, and also sanctioned by section twenty-eight of the act when the proceeding is for the benefit of the fund. But the services in the present case were for the benefit of the special fund of a class of creditors, and in opposition to the interests of the general •creditors out of whose fund the allowance is sought; therefore, the counsel who now petition do not bring themselves within the rule stated. The language of a recent case to which I assent, is this: “In order to justify an order that the assignee pay such claim (counsel fee), it must be clearly shown that the alleged services were properly and necessarily rendered for the purpose of benefiting or preserving the estate of the bankrupts, in the interests of the general creditors, and not in the interest of any creditor or class of creditors.” In re Jaycox [Case No. 7,239]. The prayer of the petition is denied.
[See Case No. 6,681.]