114 P. 569 | Cal. | 1911
Writ of review was issued from this court under the following allegations set forth in a verified petition: Frank B. Del Carlo, a minor, through his guardian ad litem, Frank Del Carlo, duly and regularly appointed, brought an action in the superior court of the city and county of San Francisco, against the United Railroads of San Francisco, to recover damages for personal injuries. The action was assigned to the department presided over by the Honorable Frank J. Murasky. The guardian ad litem employed petitioner, an attorney at law, to prosecute the action on behalf of the minor. Leave to compromise the action was obtained from the superior court, and the action was compromised and settled for the sum of thirteen hundred dollars. The superior court in which the action was thus compromised and settled "allowed petitioner an attorney's fee in the sum of $650." *440 Thereafter, in the probate department of the superior court, presided over by the Honorable J.V. Coffey, Frank Del Carlo was appointed guardian of the estate of the minor, and from the last named court a citation was issued to petitioner to show cause why the judge in probate should not fix the compensation of petitioner for his services rendered in the litigation against the United Railroads above set forth. In response to this citation petitioner made answer and showing that his fee had been fixed by the Honorable Frank J. Murasky in the sum of six hundred and fifty dollars, and for this reason objected to the jurisdiction of the court in probate to proceed with the hearing of the matter. Notwithstanding this, the court in probate made its order fixing petitioner's compensation in the sum of two hundred and fifty dollars, and requiring him to pay over fifty dollars of the three hundred dollars which he had collected and retained under the compromise.
It was under these allegations of fact that the order was issued to determine the question of the jurisdiction of the probate court to make its order fixing the fee of petitioner when that fee had already been previously fixed by another department having jurisdiction of the litigation in prosecution of which the services were rendered. (Cole v. Superior Court,
Sloss, J., Angellotti, J., Shaw, J., Melvin, J., and Lorigan, J., concurred. *441