52 N.C. App. 353 | N.C. Ct. App. | 1981
The sole question on this appeal is whether the court properly required petitioner to pay respondent’s counsel fees as a part
In Patrick, relied upon by respondent, the Court was faced with the exact opposite of the question here presented. Patrick was also a proceeding asking for an advancement from the estate of an incompetent. The clerk, affirmed by the judge, held petitioner was entitled to an advancement, and also ordered $625 in legal fees to be paid to petitioner’s attorney out of the assets of the guardianship. The Supreme Court reversed the order for attorney fees, holding that the case was a statutory proceeding, and in the absence of statutory authority allowing the taxing of such attorney fees against the guardianship assets, such fees may not be allowed from the assets of the estate. In reaching this conclusion, the Court distinguished those cases in which attorney fees are properly taxed against the assets of an estate, where the attorney represents the fiduciary in the management, conservation, creation or protection of the trust funds. No case cited in Patrick allowed a fiduciary to recover from the opposing party attorney fees so paid from the assets of the estate.
Our research has not disclosed a case directly in point. A brief review of the history of attorney’s fees in North Carolina is helpful. Such review is presented to us by Justice Barnhill in Trust Co. v. Schneider, 235 N.C. 446, 70 S.E. 2d 578 (1952):
Prior to 1868 counsel fees for the successful litigant were fixed by statute and allowed as a part of the cost or expense of litigation. The Code of Civil Procedure, adopted in 1868, abolished the tax fees of attorneys and made provision for the recovery by the successful party of certain amounts which were supposed to reimburse him for his expense. . . . This was changed in 1870-71 and certain fixed fees for attorneys were allowed as under the former law. ... In 1879*356 this was repealed, leaving no statutory provision for attorneys’ fees as costs. . . .
Thus the nonallowance of counsel fees as a part of the costs of litigation was deliberately adopted as the policy in this State as early as 1879. That policy, as modified by the provisions of G.S. 6-21, has prevailed in this State since that date.
Id. at 454, 70 S.E. 2d at 584 (citations omitted). Further insight into the historical basis for attorney fees in North Carolina is contained in Chief Justice Clark’s dissenting opinion in In re Stone, 176 N.C. 336, 340, 97 S.E. 216, 218 (1918).
N.C.G.S. 7A-306(c), 1979 Supplement, controls costs in special proceedings, stating in pertinent part:
§ 7A-306. Costs in special proceedings. . . .
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(c) The uniform costs set forth in this section are complete and exclusive, and in lieu of any and all other costs, fees, and commissions, except that the following additional expenses, when incurred, are assessable or recoverable, as the case may be:
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(2) Counsel fees, as provided by law.
Thus counsel fees are not recoverable as a part of costs except where provided by law. The statute governing petitions for advancements, N.C.G.S. ch. 35, art. 5, does not authorize the recovery of counsel fees as part of the costs in such proceedings. Nor is there any case law sanctioning such recovery.
In the absence of statutory authority, it is the general rule in North Carolina that a court may not allow attorney fees as a part of the costs recoverable by the successful party in a civil action or special proceeding. Hicks v. Albertson, 284 N.C. 236, 200 S.E. 2d 40 (1973); Records v. Tape Corp., 18 N.C. App. 183, 196 S.E. 2d 598, cert. denied, 283 N.C. 666 (1973). “Except as so provided by statute, attorney’s fees are not allowable.” Baxter v. Jones, 283 N.C. 327, 330, 196 S.E. 2d 193, 196 (1973). Respondent would have us abandon the settled public policy of North Carolina with
The order of the superior court allowing respondent’s motion to tax petitioner with respondent’s counsel fees as a part of the costs is
Reversed.