MEMORANDUM
Before the court is the motion of plaintiff, Palmer K. Sehreiber (“Sehreiber”), to allow him to execute on property of defendant, Christopher G. Kellogg (“Kellogg”), to satisfy a $512,863.76 judgment of this court. The judgment resulted from Kellogg’s breach of contract for counsel fees owed to Sehreiber, his former lawyer. Sehreiber seeks to execute on Kellogg’s sizeable income from a trust under the will of his great-grandfather, Rodman Wanamaker. The crucial issue is whether defendant’s trust income is subject to a spendthrift provision so as to prevent alienation. The court held an evidentiary hearing on the pending motion.
This matter takes us back some 66 years, to the death of Rodman Wanamaker on March 9, 1928. He left a will and codicil under which he created a trust for his children and their issue. 1 For many years the principal asset of the trust was the stock of John Wanamaker, Philadelphia (“JWP”), a major department store. On March 7, 1978, Carter, Hawley, Hale, Inc. made an offer for all outstanding stock of JWP consisting of stock and cash worth approximately $40 million. Sehreiber and his client Kellogg, who was at that time a contingent income beneficiary of the trust, undertook efforts to increase the sale price. 2 Partially as a result of the efforts of Sehreiber and Kellogg, the store was sold in May, 1978 for $60 million— an increase of some $20 million over the initial offer. On October 10, 1978, Sehreiber filed a Fee Petition with the Orphans’ Court of Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, seeking $650,000 from the trust corpus for his services in connection with the JWP sale.
According to plaintiff, he and Kellogg had an oral fee agreement concerning his services performed in connection with the sale. At the Orphans’ Court hearing on his fee petition, Sehreiber testified that in order to allow Kellogg to engage the services of backup counsel for litigation support, he absolved Mr. Kellogg of personal liability and, “agreed to look solely to the court for any remuneration [he] would be entitled to in connection with the sale of John Wanamaker’s.” (N.T. Sehreiber claim for Counsel Fees, 9/17/79). Sehreiber alleges that in exchange for his waiver, Kellogg and backup litigation counsel agreed that Sehreiber would receive, as a referral fee, one-third of the fees paid by Kellogg to the backup counsel in connection with the sale of JWP.
Ultimately, the Orphans’ Court awarded Sehreiber $100,000 in counsel fees and approximately $17,000 in interest from the corpus of the trust. He later received a judgment against another attorney involved in the sale of JWP in the amount of $87,907.87 plus $15,000 in counsel fees and interest of $6,138.26, for breach of their fee sharing agreement.
*385 On October 31, 1978, subsequent to the sale of the JWP stock, Schreiber, on behalf of his client Kellogg, filed in the Orphans’ Court of Montgomery County a Petition for Surcharge and Removal of Trustees, Disqualification of Counsel for the Trustees and Objections to Account (“surcharge action”). The petition alleged various acts of negligence, mismanagement and breach of fiduciary duty. The Orphans’ Court denied the Petition to Disqualify Counsel for the Trustees on January 17, 1979. Schreiber, on behalf of Kellogg, appealed to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. That court later quashed the appeal.
In early May, 1981, the parties agreed to a settlement of the entire surcharge action. The settlement obligated the trustees to hold regular meetings, make certain information available to the beneficiaries, and file a plan for the establishment of a retirement age for trustees. It also exonerated the trustees of any surcharge liability, required Kellogg to pay his own counsel fees and to obtain releases of any claims against the trust from counsel, and allowed the' trustees to collect their fees from the trust corpus. Kellogg was not appointed a trustee and no trustees were removed.
On May 13, 1981, Schreiber and Kellogg signed a fee agreement which became the subject of this lawsuit. In sum, the agreement provides that Kellogg would pay Schreiber $80,000 with interest at a rate which was “commercially competitive considering risk and terms of payment.” It further states, “[T]he Counsel Fee shall be in full satisfaction of your obligations to me for legal services rendered by me in connection with the Surcharge Action or in connection with your obligations to me for the Referral Fees.” The “referral fee” refers to the agreement between' Schreiber, Kellogg and backup counsel that Schreiber would receive one-third of any fees paid to the backup counsel. Kellogg only paid $5,000 to backup counsel. However, the backup counsel released Kellogg from liability for any remaining fees. The May 13, 1981 agreement states that Kellogg agreed to reimburse Schreiber directly for the $11,402.92 which Schreiber would have received had Kellogg paid the full amount due.
Kellogg never paid the amount set forth in the May 13, 1981 agreement, and Schreiber instituted this action to collect his fees. After a non-jury trial, this court found that the May 13, 1981 agreement constituted a valid written contract for the payment of fees and entered judgment in favor of plaintiff for fees and interest of $512,863.76.
After this court denied defendant’s post-trial motions, plaintiff sought to execute on the judgment. Defendant appealed the judgment but did not and has not filed an appeal bond. This court refused to stay execution of the judgment pending appeal.
Schreiber v. Kellogg,
Defendant first contends that this court lacks jurisdiction over plaintiffs motion because of the pendency of his appeal to the Third Circuit. This argument is without merit. The mere pendency of an appeal, without a stay, does not operate to stay execution proceedings.
In re Spier Aircraft Corporation,
The trustees of the Wanamaker trust have filed a memorandum in which they contend that the Orphans’ Court has exclusive jurisdiction to construe the will of Rod-man Wanamaker. Alternatively, they assert that this court should abstain from exercising jurisdiction.
The contention that this court lacks jurisdiction is incorrect. As the Supreme Court stated,
it has been established by a long series of decisions of this Court that federal courts of equity have jurisdiction to entertain suits “in favor of creditors, legatees and heirs” and other claimants against a decedent’s estate “to establish their claims” so long as the federal court does not interfere *386 with the probate proceedings or assume general jurisdiction of the probate or control of the property in the custody of the state court.
Markham v. Allen,
The administration and distribution of the real and personal property of testamentary trusts, and the reformation and setting aside of any such trusts ...
As plaintiff points out, however, this statute merely refers certain matters to a particular division of the Common Pleas Court. A state statute cannot divest a federal court of jurisdiction over its execution proceedings.
The trustees have cited no case which stands for the proposition that this court lacks jurisdiction over the instant matter, but have instead pointed to cases where the federal court has abstained from exercising jurisdiction. In
Ryan v. First Pennsylvania Banking and Trust Co.,
In
Reichman v. Pittsburgh National Bank,
The Supreme Court has emphasized that “[t]he doctrine of abstention ... is an extraordinary and narrow exception to the duty of a district Court to adjudicate a controversy properly before it.”
County of Allegheny v. Frank Mashuda Co.,
The district court is not free to abstain merely because state law is unclear.
Meredith v. Winter Haven,
*387 In the present case, the federal court has a vital interest in the issue of enforcement of its judgments. No such federal interest was present in either Ryan or Reichman. The substantial federal interest outweighs any state interest in whether Kellogg’s income from the Wanamaker trust is protected by a spendthrift clause. Finally, administrative convenience and efficiency would not be served by abstention. Unlike in Ryan and Reichman, we are not in the preliminary stages of the federal lawsuit. This court has already held a trial and is intimately familiar with the issues involved. Consequently, abstention is not warranted-under these circumstances.
We now turn to the merits of the case. In a proceeding to execute on a judgment, this court is bound, pursuant to Rule 69(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure,
3
to follow state law in determining whether the defendant has an interest in property which is subject to execution.
United States v. Yazell,
The parties strongly disagree as to whether a spendthrift clause protects Kellogg’s interest in the trust. A spendthrift trust exists where there is an express provision forbidding anticipatory alienation and attachments by creditors.
See e.g. In re Keeler’s Estate,
When interpreting a will under Pennsylvania law, the court seeks to ascertain the intent of the testator:
The intention of the testator is the pole star in the interpretation of every will and that intention must be ascertained from a consideration of the entire will, including its scheme of distribution as well as its language, together with all the surrounding and attendant circumstances.
Estate of Wanamaker,
The will of Rodman Wanamaker establishes the trust at issue in Paragraph Third. Mr. Wanamaker directed the trustees to pay the annual income of the trust to each of his children, such that the income:
Shall then annually be divided equally between my three (3) children, Fernanda W. Heeran, John Wanamaker, Jr., Marie Louise Munn, during their life for their sole and separate use, not to be anticipated, or assigned by them, in any manner *388 whatever, nor subject to any attachment, alienation or sequestration for their debts, contracts or engagements.
******
In the event of the decease of one of my said children then the income to which said deceased parent would have been entitled, had they lived, shall then be divided into two parts. One (1) share thereof shall be equally divided among the children, then living, of such deceased child, so that said children, or in the event of there being but one child surviving, my said deceased child, shall enjoy to the extent of one-half Qk) the share his, her or their parent would have received had they continued to live. That this provision of descent shall apply to all of my children, and, in the event of all of said three (3) children dying, then the share to which each of such child, or children, was respectively entitled, during their lifetime, to the one-half Qk) extent, above provided for, shall go to and be enjoyed by the children, then living of such deceased child or children.
(emphasis added).
In Paragraph Eighth, Mr. Wanamaker restates the grant of income and disposes of the principal of the trust:
Eighth. In further Trust, on the part of my said Trustees, to hold said Capital Stock, and all dividends, income or money derived therefrom, subject to the provisions herein previously contained, for the benefit of all the child, or children, of all the children of my three (3) children, for and during the term of their natural life, or lives, of such of my said grandchildren, and for the period of twenty-one (21) years after the date of the decease of the last surviving grandchild. In further Trust, at the expiration of the period of twenty-one (21) years, after the date of the decease of the last surviving grandchild, of my children, then said stock, or the proceeds which may be derived therefrom, to be equally divided, share and share alike, into as many parts as there may then be great-grandchildren of mine, surviving ...
(emphasis added).
All parties concede that Paragraph Third imposes spendthrift protection on the interests of Mr. Wanamaker’s children. Plaintiff contends that because the spendthrift clause is worded so as to preclude Mr. Wanamaker’s children from alienating the income but does not repeat the restriction with respect to the gift over to his grandchildren, no spendthrift protection is imposed on the income of his grandchildren and their descendants. Schreiber further contends that the direction that the trustees are “to hold said Capital Stock, and all dividends, income or money derived therefrom, subject to the provisions herein previously contained,” (emphasis added) does not incorporate the spendthrift provision but merely indicates that a gift made in a preceding paragraph will take precedence over a later stated gift.
The fact that the trust does not specifically state that the income of Mr. Wanamaker’s grandchildren is subject to spendthrift protection does not end the inquiry. In
Ball v. Weightman,
In the present case, considering the will as a whole, this court concludes that plaintiffs reading is incorrect. Here, as in Ball, supra there appears to be no intent on the part of the testator to distinguish between beneficiaries with regard to spendthrift protection. Moreover, we find no principled reason to conclude that the phrase, “subject to the provisions herein contained” does not include the provision imposing spendthrift protection on the trust income.
*389 Plaintiff contends that, in a separate trust created under the same will, Mr. Wanamaker specifically directed that spendthrift protection be afforded the interests of all the beneficiaries. According to plaintiff, Mr. Wanamaker knew how to make such a grant and specifically chose not to do so with regard to the trust at issue here. Plaintiff points to Paragraph Second which creates a trust consisting of life insurance proceeds. There, Mr. Wanamaker granted his children income “without power on their part to anticipate or assign the same, in any manner whatever, or be subject to any attachment, alienation or sequestration for their debts, contracts or engagements.” He further provided that upon the death of a child, the child’s income was to be paid to the child’s issue, “in accordance with the same terms and conditions under which the parent, or parents enjoyed the same during their lifetime.”
This court finds no significant difference between the phrases “in accordance with the same terms and conditions” and “subject to the provisions herein previously contained.” Furthermore, plaintiffs close reading assumes a careful and competent scrivener accurately transcribing the testator’s intent. Unfortunately, as the Pennsylvania Supreme Court noted when construing, the will in question many years ago, errors and ambiguous language were “characteristic of the slovenly method of the scrivener ...”
In re Wanamaker’s Estate,
Plaintiff next contends that he may execute on defendant’s trust income regardless of spendthrift protection because he performed services which benefited defendant’s interest as a beneficiary of the trust. Plaintiff-relies for this proposition on § 157(c) of the Restatement (2d) of Trusts (1959). Section 157 provides:
Although a trust is a spendthrift trust or a trust for support, the interest of the beneficiary can be reached in satisfaction of an enforceable claim against the beneficiary,
(a) by the wife or child of the beneficiary for support, or by the wife for alimony;
(b) for necessary services rendered to the beneficiary or necessary supplies furnished to him;
(c) for services rendered and materials furnished which preserve or benefit the interest of the beneficiary;
(d) by the United States or a State to satisfy a claim against the beneficiary.
(emphasis added).
No Pennsylvania court has yet addressed the applicability of § 157(c). Consequently, this court must determine whether the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania would adopt that section of the Restatement (2d), and if so, whether it is applicable to the facts of the present ease.
Commissioner v. Estate of Bosch,
In determining whether Pennsylvania would adopt § 157(c), we must review the rationale behind the proposed exception. The Comment to § 157(c) in the Restatement (2d) explains that the subsection is necessary to prevent unjust enrichment of the beneficiary. To the same effect is Scott on Trusts, which states:
The purpose of the settlor in imposing restrictions on the alienation of the beneficiary’s interest is to prevent him from losing his interest by his own improvidence. There is no reason, however, why his interest under .the trust should be exempt from the claims of those who have by their services conferred a benefit on his interest. He should not be permitted to profit at their expense.
IIA William F. Fratcher, Scott on Trusts, § 157.3, p. 208 (4th ed. 1987). Noted trust expert Erwin Griswold has stated that in addition to the desire to prevent unjust enrichment, the exception is necessary to ensure that beneficiaries have the means to protect their interests:
Without such a remedy, needy beneficiaries may be wholly unable to enforce their *390 interests or to obtain protection in case the trust is not properly administered.
Griswold, Spendthrift Trusts § 346 at p. 410 (2d Ed.1947).
As stated above, no Pennsylvania case has construed § 157(c). In fact, this court has found only one case expressly adopting § 157(c). In
Evans & Luptak v. Obolensky,
Other courts considering the claims of attorneys who have performed services for the beneficiaries of spendthrift trusts have split on whether an attorney can attach the beneficiary’s interest in the trust. In
Castree v. Shotwell,
Conversely, in
Williams v. Bischoff,
The Pennsylvania courts are firmly committed to the enforcement of spendthrift provisions. “The recognition of a testator’s right to protect his heirs from a presumed incapacity to manage inheritances is ... a definite policy of the common law. It can only be abrogated, if at all, by nothing less than express, definite, and positive enactment.”
In re Harrison’s Estate,
When a trust of this kind has been created, the law holds that the donor has an individual right of property in the execution of the trust; and to deprive him of it would be a fraud on his generosity. For the law to appropriate a gift to a person not intended would be an invasion of the donor’s private dominion.
In re Heyl’s Estate,
Plaintiff asserts that like Michigan, Pennsylvania has approved subsections (a), (b) and (d) of § 157 of the Restatement (2d) and would therefore be likely to adopt subsection (c). The underlying premise, however, is not entirely correct.
Subsection (a) which permits a spendthrift trust to be reached in satisfaction of claims for support or alimony, has been substantially, but not entirely, adopted by the Pennsylvania courts and codified by statute. In
In re Moorehead’s Estate,
Similarly, The Pennsylvania Supreme Court, in
In re Stewart’s Estate,
All income whatsoever, devised or bequeathed by any will so as to be free from the liability for the debts, contracts or engagements of the beneficiary, or so as not to be subject to execution, attachment sur judgment, sequestration, or other process, shall, notwithstanding such testamentary provisions, be subject to and liable for the support and maintenance of the wife and minor children of the beneficiary ...
However, in
Lippincott v. Lippincott,
The current applicable statutory provision provides:
Income of a trust subject to spendthrift or similar provisions shall nevertheless be liable for the support of anyone whom the income beneficiary shall be under legal duty to support.
20 Pa.Cons.Stat.Ann. § 6112. Although this statute appears broad enough to encompass claims for alimony, we have found no Pennsylvania case which so states.
With regard to § 157(b) of the Restatement (2d), which concerns claims for necessities, plaintiffs point to
Lang v. Commonwealth Dept. of Public Welfare,
To similar effect is
In re Walters,
The Lang case illustrates the importance of correctly classifying the trust at issue. In Lang, the Department of Public Welfare decided that income and principal of a testamentary trust were available resources for the beneficiary, who was therefore ineligible for medical assistance payments. The trustee appealed the decision. The court held that the issue turned on the intent of the testator in creating the trust, specifically:
whether testator created a duty in trustee, independent of any statutory duty, to provide for William’s basic support. If so, William arguably could compel distributions from the trust for his basic support.
Lang,
Finally,-plaintiff relies on Scott Estate, 11 D. & C.2d 590 (Pa.Commw.Ct.1956), for the proposition that Pennsylvania has approved § 157(d), which allows spendthrift trust income to be reached in satisfaction of claims by Federal or State government. Scott involved the adjudication of an executor’s account upon the termination of a trust. Prior to the termination, a writ of attachment was served upon the executors by the United States Treasury Department, attaching the interest of one of the beneficiaries for $448.80 for delinquent income tax. The court specifically stated that it “did not assume to decide the effectiveness of this attachment.” However, relying on § 157 of the Restatement (2d) and case law from other states, it allowed the accountants to retain $448.80 pending the determination of the attachment.
Thus, as shown above, Pennsylvania has not adopted in toto § 157(a), (b) and (d) of the Restatement (2d). A recurring theme in these cases is the courts’ extreme reluctance to frustrate the intent of the testator by permitting the invasion of spendthrift assets. A review of Pennsylvania’s treatment of spendthrift trusts in other contexts suggests that the courts of the Commonwealth would not disregard the intent of the testator merely in order to prevent unjust enrichment of the beneficiary. We note that any time a beneficiary avoids payment for goods or services based on the spendthrift protection imposed on his income, he is unjustly enriched. Moreover, Pennsylvania considers the invasion of spendthrift assets to be an “extraordinary remedy” to be employed only where truly vital interests are at stake.
Lippincott v. Lippincott,
In re Heyl’s Estate,
The court stated that it could not consider “the moral issue of fair dealing” and was required to limit the inquiry to whether the beneficiary was within her rights to revoke. The court held that the original agreement was an assignment of the beneficiary’s future interest in violation of the spendthrift limitation, and was therefore, “illegal, void and unenforceable ab initio.” Id. at 131. The fact that the co-benefieiary’s interest in the trust was reduced because of the revocation could not justify a violation of the terms of the spendthrift provision. Id.
It is possible that under certain circumstances it may comport with the testator’s intent to compel payment from spendthrift assets. Such might be the case where the beneficiary was in danger of losing his interest in the trust or if funds were being wrongfully withheld. One might assume that the testator would not have intended that restrictions placed on the trust for the protection of the beneficiary’s income actually prevent the beneficiary from protecting his right to receive that income.
See Williams v. Bischoff,
In this case, Schreiber seeks compensation for his work in connection with the sale of JWP and the surcharge action. However, as stated above, Schreiber discharged Kellogg from all liability for payment of fees in connection with the sale. Furthermore, the May 13,1981 agreement which forms the basis for his claim here, obligates Kellogg only for the surcharge action and the referral fee. 6 Consequently, we need not consider any benefit which Schreiber may have conferred on Kek logg’s interest in the trust as a result of work performed in connection with the sale of JWP.
With respect to Schreiber’s compensation for the surcharge action, we first seek to determine the intent of Rodman Wanamaker, as set forth in his will. Article Third of the will states in pertinent part:
I want my Trustees to be absolutely free and clear form all harassment, of all kinds, and this decision on my part shall be a complete and final answer to any demand which may be made upon them for the payment of money at any time whether made upon request, or by attempted suit.
Similarly, Article Thirteenth of the will states:
It is my wish, and I so direct, said Trustees shall not be obliged to enter security, or bond, for the faithful discharge of their duties, nor shall they be obliged, at any time, to make any public accounting, or give out statements of accounts, or figures from the books, or records, of any of the Corporations. Any one [sic] interested therein, as a beneficiary, can personally obtain any information said Trustees, their survivors, are willing to give, but such information shall not be obtained, at any time, through counsel of any of the parties, or under Letters of Attorney-in-Fact, representing any one or by litigation. It is my wish full information shall be given of the business, in its details, at all reasonable times, to all parties in interest, in person, but not otherwise.
Judge Alfred Taxis, who presided over the surcharge litigation in the Orphans’ Court of Montgomery County, had the opportunity to interpret these provisions. The trustees filed an answer to the surcharge petition listing the above provisions of the will as a *394 defense to the action. Specifically, the trustees alleged that the will precluded a beneficiary from asserting a claim against the trustees based upon alleged mismanagement of JWP or based on an alleged failure to furnish information to the beneficiaries. Kellogg then filed preliminary objections to the answer, contending that the provisions were contrary to public policy. Judge Taxis determined that the testator’s manifest intent was to protect the trustees from any interference from the cestui que trust in the running of the business:
[H]e [Rodman Wanamaker] made perfectly clear and left no doubt as to the matter, and that was that the trustees were to suffer no interference whatever by the ces-tui que trustent by the injection of the latter’s opinion or suggestions as to how the business should be conducted or as to anything relative to the business, much less that the trustees should be challenged or annoyed by any litigation thereto.
Wanamaker Estate,
As stated above, the terms of the settlement obligated the trustees to hold regular meetings and make certain information available to all beneficiaries, but did not require the payment of money into the trust or result in the discharge of any trustee. At the hearing before this court, Schreiber and his expert witness confirmed that this settlement agreement ran contrary to provisions of the will.
We cite the above provisions of Rodman Wanamaker’s will as evidence that allowing Schreiber to attach Kellogg’s spendthrift income would not comport with the testator’s intent in this instance. While the equities seem to be in favor of Schreiber, we cannot ignore the testator’s intent. Given Mr. Wanamaker’s expressed desire to insulate the trustees from interference and Pennsylvania’s extreme reluctance to allow the attachment of spendthrift income, we conclude that in this instance the Pennsylvania Supreme Court would not allow the invasion of Kellogg’s spendthrift income to satisfy the judgment in this action. Pennsylvania, we believe, would not apply § 157(c) of the Restatement (2d) to negate the wishes of Rod-man Wanamaker under the circumstances of this case. We note that this conclusion does not in any way undermine the validity of the underlying judgment in this case. We hold only that Schreiber may not attach Kellogg’s protected income in satisfaction of that judgment.
Accordingly, the court will deny the motion of plaintiff Palmer Schreiber to execute on defendant Christopher Kellogg’s income from the Wanamaker trust.
Notes
. The will did not expressly provide that Wanamaker’s great-grandchildren would succeed to their parent's share of income upon their parent's death. However, an opinion by Judge Alfred Taxis, of the Orphans' Court of Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, held that a great-grandchild would take his or her deceased parent's share of income prior to the termination of the trust.
The court reasoned that the will as a whole evidenced a "general pcr-stirpital plan of distribution by the testator," and that the failure to include explicit language was an oversight of the scrivener. The defendant, Kellogg, became a contingent income beneficiary of the trust as a result of this decision. In re Wanamaker Estate, Orphans' Court of Montgomery County, No. 35,456 (April 26, 1946).
. Kellogg's mother, Fernanda W. Kellogg, was the granddaughter of Rodman Wanamaker and the income beneficiary at the time. Mrs. Kellogg died in August, 1989, at which time her son became an income beneficiary.
. Rule 69(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provides:
Process to enforce judgment for the payment of money shall be a writ of execution, unless the court directs otherwise. The procedure on execution, in proceedings on and in aid of execution shall be in accordance with the practice and procedure of the state in which the district court is held, existing at the time the remedy is sought, except that any statute of the United States governs to the extent that it is applicable....
. Pennsylvania had no provision for alimony in an absolute divorce until the General Assembly enacted the Divorce Code of 1980. 23 P.S. § 104 [repealed]. See now 23 Pa.Cons.Stat.Ann. § 3103, added in 1990.
. Our resolution of this case also makes it unnecessary for the court to consider whether if Pennsylvania were to adopt § 157(c) it would apply retroactively to testamentary trusts established prior to the publication of the Restatement of Trusts in 1935. Subsections (a), (b) and (c) of § 157 of the Restatement Trusts (1935) are identical to those in § 157 of the Restatement (2d) Trusts adopted in 1959.
. At the hearing before this court, Schreiber-ar-gued that the referral fee referenced in the May 13, 1981 agreement was meant to be compensation for his work in connection with the sale of JWP. Consequently, he contends that he may attach the trust income as compensation for work performed in connection with the sale. However, because Schreiber discharged Kellogg from any liability for payment of the fees in connection with the sale of JWP, we need not determine the exact nature of the referral fee.
