50 A. 416 | Md. | 1901
The question presented by the record now before us lies in a very narrow compass. In February, nineteen hundred, a bill was filed on the equity side of the Circuit Court for Carroll County by the next friend of several infants, against those infants, the object being to procure a decree for the sale of certain real estate which had descended to those infants upon the death of their father, a certain Isaac W. Repp. The ground upon which the sale was sought was that the land was not capable of partition without loss or injury. Mr. Joseph D. *78 Brooks of the Carroll County Bar was employed to file the bill. The proceedings were conducted by him to final decree. After the sale had been made by the trustee named in the decree and had been ratified, and after the purchaser had paid the purchase money, it was discovered that Mr. Repp owed at the time of his death debts exceeding in amount the value of the personal estate left by him. Thereupon some of the creditors filed a petition in the equity cause intended to convert, and which did in effect convert, the proceeding from a partition suit into a creditor's suit. Finally an audit was stated wherein the claims not paid out of the decedent's personal estate were allowed out of the proceeds of the sale of the real property, and the surplus was distributed to the widow and infants. In the audit a credit of one hundred dollars was allowed the trustee for a fee of that amount paid to Mr. Brooks for filing the original bill and for conducting the proceedings to final decree. No exceptions were filed to the ratification of the audit and it was finally ratified with the exception of the credit of the one hundred dollar fee. The Court apparently of its own motion disallowed that credit and directed the trustee to pay that one hundred dollars to the widow and children of the intestate in addition to the amounts audited to them. From that branch of the order of ratification the trustee has appealed. The single question is this: Was the solicitor who conducted the proceedings instituted for a sale of the land entitled to a fee out of the proceeds of sale?
There ought to be no doubt or difficulty about such a question. It appears by the audit that the trustee actually paid Mr. Brooks the fee; and, therefore, the order directing the trustee to pay the same money over again to other and different parties exposed him to a liability from which he could only escape by appealing. This is not a case where the trustee being a mere stakeholder undertakes to appeal from an order distributing the fund in his hands and where the real contest is one between creditors in which he is not involved, as in Stewart v. Codd,
Order reversed with costs and audit as reported by the auditorratified.
(Decided November 22d 1901.) *80