26 F. 133 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Pennsylvania | 1886
The order of referenco to the master, “to ascertain and report to the court the proper and just charges connected with this cause, and amount thereof, which ought to be paid out of the
Now, the very fact that this litigation may be so determined goes far to overthrow the conclusion of the learned master that the claims of the solicitors of the railroad company for their fees are both “part of the costs of this suit,” and entitled to priority of lien over the claim of Thomas P. Simpson. Undoubtedly, a chancellor will, out of a-fund for distribution, order compensation to the counsel engaged for the value of their services, when the fund, in equity and good conscience, should be subjected to such burden. Appeal of McKelvy, 16 Pittsb. Leg. J. (N. S.) 150. Thus, where one of many parties in interest recovers or saves from destruction a trust fund, his reasonable counsel fees will be charged on the fund, upon the ground that it would be inequitable that one alone should bear the burden when others partake of the benefit. Trustees v. Greenough, 105 U. S. 527. But is this principle available here to the solicitors of the railroad company, as against Thomas P. Simpson, and to his prejudice ? Beyond disputation, their services have been valuable to their own client, and were there a surplus fund here to be disposed of, it might well be that, as against the railroad company itself, the court would order the reasonable fees of its' counsel to be paid out of that surplus; and, possibly, in the' distribution of such fund, these fees would be preferred to the claims of general creditors; but as against Thomas P. Simpson, I am.quite at a loss to see what equity these solicitors have. Their services have in nowise benefited him. The original suit was brought by the railroad company against Simpson to set aside, as ultra vires, the construction contract between him and the company, and the prayer for its rescission prevailed. Thus Simpson lost the
The exceptions which go to the amount of the master’s allowances to the railroad company’s solicitors (and also the special exceptions filed by A. C. Weaver) need not at present be considered; for, unless the railroad should go to sale, and a surplus over Simpson’s claim bo realized, the court, in the view we have taken, will not be called on to deal with the question of the reasonableness of those allowances, or, indeed, to deal at all with the subject of said fees.
And now, January 2,1886, so much of the master’s report as relates to the receiver’s compensation and the fee of his counsel is confirmed; but all the exceptions filed by Thomas P. Simpson to said report, touching the preference given by the master to the claims of the solicitors of the Newcastle Northern Railway Company for foes, are sustained; and all other questions are reserved for further consideration hereafter.