1. An appeal lies from a decree in equity for costs when they
are directed to be paid not by a particular party, but out of a
fund in the hands or under the control of the court.
2. A decree made by a circuit court of the United States
directing that the complainant be paid his costs and expenses out
of a fund in court -- the fund in the meantime, remaining in the
court in course of administration -- is
pro tanto a final
decree from which, if their amount be sufficient, an appeal will
lie.
3. A trust estate must bear the necessary expenses of its
administration.
4. One jointly interested with others in a common fund who in
good faith maintains the necessary litigation to save it from waste
and secure its proper application is entitled in equity to the
reimbursement of his costs as between solicitor and client, either
out of the fund itself or by proportionate contributions from those
who receive the benefit of the litigation.
5. Where bonds issued by a corporation are secured by a trust
fund which the trustee is wasting or misapplying or which he
refuses or neglects to apply to the payment of them, a holder of a
portion of them who in good faith files a bill to secure a due
application of the fund and succeeds in bringing it under the
control of the court for the common benefit of the bondholders is
entitled to be paid from the fund before its distribution his
costs, counsel fees, and necessary expenses of the litigation --
that is to say, his costs as between solicitor and client. A claim,
however, for his private expenses, such as traveling fares and
hotel bills or for his own time or personal services, cannot be
allowed.
6. The practice of allowing to trustees, complainants, and
receivers and their counsel large and extravagant counsel fees and
commissions payable out of trust funds under the control of the
court commented on and disapproved.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question is this case is one of costs, expenses, and
allowances awarded to the complainant below out of a trust fund
under the control of the court. Ordinarily a decree will not be
reviewed by this Court on a question of costs merely in a suit in
equity, although the Court has entire control of the matter of
costs, as well as the merits, when it has possession of
Page 105 U. S. 528
the cause on appeal from the final decree. But it was held by
Lord Cottenham in
Angell v. Davis, 4 Myl. & Craig 360,
that when the case is not one of personal costs in which the court
has ordered one party to pay them, but a case in which the court
has directed them to be paid out of a particular fund, an appeal
lies on the part of those interested in the fund. Lord Cottenham
indeed suggested other cases in which an appeal might lie from a
decree for costs, as where the costs are part of the specific
relief prayed; and where the whole of the facts distinctly appear
upon the face of the proceedings themselves, so that it is not
necessary, in determining the question, to enter into any
investigation of the merits. But these suggestions have not met
with subsequent approval, and in the case of
Taylor v.
Dowlen, Law Rep. 4 Ch.App. 697, the court declared that they
were not disposed to extend the case of
Angell v. Davis,
and dismissed an appeal brought by parties ordered to pay costs
which they claimed should be payable out of a fund.
But these discussions in the English courts arose under a system
in which appeals from interlocutory orders are allowed. We can only
entertain an appeal from a final decree, and supposing the
objection to the appeal on the ground of its being from a decree
for costs only is untenable, as we think it is, then arises another
question -- whether the orders appealed from amount to a final
decree.
The principal suit was commenced in 1870 by a bill filed by
Francis Vose, a large holder of bonds of the Florida Railroad
Company, on behalf of himself and the other bondholders, against
Harrison Reed and others, trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund
of Florida, and against the former members of the same board and
against the board itself as a corporation and sundry other
corporations alleged to be in complicity with them. That fund
consisted of ten or eleven million acres of lands belonging to the
state, including certain proceeds of the sale of some of them, and
was pledged for the payment of the interest accruing on the bonds
and installments of the sinking fund for meeting the principal,
which were largely in arrear. The charge of the bill is to the
effect that the trustees were wasting and destroying the fund by
selling at nominal
Page 105 U. S. 529
prices the lands by the hundred thousand and even million acres,
and failed and refused to provide for the payment of interest or
sinking fund on the bonds. The bill prayed that the fraudulent
conveyances be set aside and the trustees enjoined from selling
more lands, and that a receiver be appointed to take care of the
fund.
The litigation was carried on with great vigor and at much
expense, and in fact a large amount of the trust fund was secured
and saved; the management of the fund was taken out of the hands of
the trustees; agents were appointed by the court to make sales of
the land, and made a large number of sales; a considerable amount
of money was realized, and dividends have been made amongst the
bondholders, most of whom came in and took the benefit of the
litigation. Vose, the complainant, bore the whole burden of this
litigation, and advanced most of the expenses which were necessary
for the purpose of rendering it effective and successful. In 1875,
he filed a petition setting forth these advances and the efforts
made by him, and prayed an allowance out of the fund for his
expenses and services. In December, 1876, an order was made by the
court referring it to a master to ascertain: 1. What and by whom
the necessary expenditures have been incurred in bringing the
moneys already received into court. 2. What necessary expenditures
have been made, and by whom, in protecting the landed and sinking
fund from which this money has been and will be realized. 3. What
personal services have been rendered, and by whom, in said work,
and the value thereof. 4. What amount of same have been charged to
Francis Vose by the receiver instead of being paid out of the
common fund in his hands.
Vose presented his account and vouchers before the master, and
testimony was taken on the subject. In 1877, the master made a
report in which, amongst other things, he stated as follows:
"
First, after consideration of the proofs as submitted
to me, I find and report that the moneys which have already been
received, whether upon account of the internal improvement fund or
of the sinking fund, have been brought into court at the instance
and the suit and by the sole efforts of
Page 105 U. S. 530
Francis Vose, the petitioner, through himself, his solicitors
and his agents, and by the instrumentality more directly and
especially of his proceeding in equity against the Trustees of the
Internal Improvement Fund
et al., as they appear in the
records which are made evidence in this case."
The master further reported a statement of expenditures made by
Vose in the cause, and declared that they were necessary
expenditures, being for fees of solicitors and counsel, costs of
court, and sundry small incidental items for copying records and
the like, the whole amounting to $34,192.62. He also stated and
allowed sundry fees paid in maintaining other suits in New York,
and on appeal to this Court, attorneys' fees for resisting
fraudulent coupons, and expenses paid to attorneys and agents to
investigate fraudulent grants of the trust lands, amounting in all
to $19,745.68. He also reported in favor of an allowance to Vose
for his personal services and expenditures, as follows:
"I further find and report that peculiar and great personal
services have been rendered by the petitioner, Francis Vose, in the
work of protecting the internal improvement and the sinking funds,
those services extending over a period of more than eleven years.
By the instrumentality of the suits already mentioned as having
been instituted by him, by the agencies he employed and sustained,
and by his own vigilance and personal efforts, he has saved from
spoliation and subjected to the decrees of this court a vast domain
of over ten millions of acres of land, and has brought into this
court large sums of money, which, from time to time, have been
distributed by its orders."
"I consider and report that the charge embraced in his itemized
account, and numbered forty-two (42), for $25,000 principal, and
$9,625 interest, is reasonable and just."
"I also find that the charge in his itemized account, numbered
forty-one (41), for personal expenditures of $15,003.35, is
reasonable and just. Total $40,003.35."
The first of these items consisted of an allowance of $2,500 a
year for ten years of personal services; the second was for
railroad fares and hotel bills paid by the complainant.
The proceedings before the master were opposed, but, on a
hearing upon the report and the evidence submitted therewith,
Page 105 U. S. 531
the court confirmed it to the extent of $27,835.34, allowing
generally the fees of the officers of the court, and those of the
attorneys and solicitors employed in the cause, including charges
as between attorney and client, at the same time disallowing
certain fees paid to advisory counsel and other items not directly
connected with the suit and referring the remainder of the report
for further evidence and hearing. In December, 1879, after
additional evidence had been taken, a final order was made allowing
sundry expenses for looking after and reclaiming the trust lands
and also allowing for the personal expenses and services of Vose
embraced in the two items before referred to; the total amount
allowed being $60,131.96.
The appeal to this Court is taken from these orders of the court
below, and it is contended that they were illegal because Vose was
not before the court in the character of a trustee, and therefore
not entitled to reimbursement of his expenses beyond taxable costs,
and because the allowances were not lawful if he had been such
trustee. The objections to the orders are not expressed in this
precise form, but this is the substance of them.
The first question, however, is whether these orders do or do
not amount to a final decree upon which an appeal lies to this
Court. They are certainly a final determination of the particular
matter arising upon the complainant's petition for allowances, and
direct the payment of money out of the fund in the hands of the
receiver. Though incidental to the cause, the inquiry was a
collateral one, having a distinct and independent character, and
received a final decision. The administration of the fund for the
benefit of the bondholders may continue in the court for a long
time to come, dividends being made from time to time in payment of
coupons still unsatisfied. The case is a peculiar one, it is true,
but under all the circumstances, we think that the proceeding may
be regarded as so far independent as to make the decision
substantially a final decree for the purposes of an appeal.
As to the point made by the appellants that the complainant is
only a creditor seeking satisfaction of his debt, and cannot be
regarded in the light of a trustee, and therefore is not entitled
to an allowance for any expenses or counsel fees beyond
Page 105 U. S. 532
taxed costs as between party and party, a great deal may be
said. In ordinary cases, the position of the appellants may be
correct. But in a case like the present, where the bill was filed
not only in behalf of the complainant himself, but in behalf of the
other bondholders having an equal interest in the fund, and where
the bill sought to rescue that fund from waste and destruction
arising from the neglect and misconduct of the trustees, and to
bring it into court for administration according to the purposes of
the trust, and where all this has been done, and done at great
expense and trouble on the part of the complainant, and the other
bondholders have come in and participated in the benefits resulting
from his proceedings, if the complainant is not a trustee, he has
at least acted the part of a trustee in relation to the common
interest. He may be said to have saved the fund for the
cestuis
que trust, and to have secured its proper application to their
use. There is no doubt from the evidence that, besides the
bestowment of his time for years almost exclusively to the pursuit
of this object, he has expended a large amount of money for which
no allowance has been made, nor can properly be made. It would be
very hard on him to turn him away without any allowance except the
paltry sum which could be taxed under the fee bill. It would not
only be unjust to him, but it would give to the other parties
entitled to participate in the benefits of the fund an unfair
advantage. He has worked for them as well as for himself, and if he
cannot be reimbursed out of the fund itself, they ought to
contribute their due proportion of the expenses which he has fairly
incurred. To make them a charge upon the fund is the most equitable
way of securing such contribution. And such charge cannot be justly
complained of by the trustees of the internal improvement fund,
because however fair may have been the conduct of the present
trustees, who were elected to their positions since the acts
complained of were committed by their predecessors, those acts, as
the event of the cause shows, furnished abundant ground for
instituting the proceedings.
It is a general principle that a trust estate must bear the
expenses of its administration. It is also established by
sufficient authority that where one of many parties having a
common
Page 105 U. S. 533
interest in a trust fund, at his own expense takes proper
proceedings to save it from destruction and to restore it to the
purposes of the trust, he is entitled to reimbursement either out
of the fund itself or by proportional contribution from those who
accept the benefit of his efforts. This has long been the rule in
relation to proceedings for restoring property to the uses of a
charity which has been unjustly diverted therefrom. Thus, in
Attorney General v. The Brewers' Company, 1 P.W. 376, Lord
Chancellor Cowper allowed costs to the relators out of the improved
rents which they received for the charity, "for that they had been
serviceable to the charity by easing them of the six hundred and
twenty pounds debt which was claimed against them." In
Attorney
General v. Kerr, 4 Beav. 297, it is conceded to be the general
rule that the relator in a charity information, upon obtaining a
decree, is entitled to his costs as between solicitor and client.
In that case, they were not allowed out of the general charity
estate, but were charged upon the particular property
recovered.
The same rule was followed in
Attorney General v. Old South
Society, 13 Allen (Mass.) 474.
Of course it is well understood that costs as between solicitor
and client include all reasonable expenses and counsel fees, and
are not like costs as between party and party, confined to the
taxed costs allowed by the fee bill. This difference is pointed out
in the case of
In re Paschal,
10 Wall. 483,
77 U. S.
493.
The same rule is applied to creditors' suits where a fund has
been realized by the diligence of the plaintiff. In England, where
specialty creditors have a preference, a simple contract creditor
who recovers a fund for the general benefit is allowed his costs,
as between party and party, out of the fund in preference to all
other claims, and the balance of his costs, as between solicitor
and client, are to be paid either out of the fund or
pro
rata by all the creditors who partake of the benefit of the
suit. This was the judgment in
Stanton v. Hatfield, 1
Keen, 358; followed in
Thompson v. Cooper, 2 Col.C.C. 87.
In the latter case, Vice-Chancellor Knight Bruce said:
"Having come in and proved, and obtained the benefit of the suit
which was instituted on their behalf, as well
Page 105 U. S. 534
as that of the plaintiff, it cannot be just that in such a suit
-- a suit instituted for the benefit of all the creditors -- one
alone should bear the burden, when others have the benefit."
To the same purport are
Tootal v. Spicer, 4 Sim. 510;
Larkins v. Paxton, 2 Myl. & K. 320;
Barker v.
Wardle, id. 818;
Sutton v. Doggett, 3 Beav.
9.
The rule that a party who recovers a fund for the common benefit
of creditors is entitled to have his costs and expenses paid out of
the fund prevails in bankruptcy cases. In
Worrall v.
Harford, 8 Ves.Jr. 4, Lord Eldon said:
"The petitioning creditor is answerable till the assignment. Can
there be a doubt that the assignees, if there be nothing special in
the deed, would have a clear right to pay all the expenses
incurred? It would be implied, if not expressed."
This rule has been followed by the district courts of the United
States.
See a forcible opinion of Judge Bryan,
In re
Williams, 2 Bank.Reg. 28, in the District Court of South
Carolina, and
In the Matter of O'Hara, 8 Law Reg.N.S. 113,
in the Western District of Pennsylvania. In a case in Massachusetts
before Judge Lowell, the same rule was adopted. The petitioning
creditors charged as an act of bankruptcy the execution of a
mortgage by the debtors, and having succeeded, after much
opposition, in substantiating the charge, they asked that counsel
fees should be allowed them out of the estate. The remarks of Judge
Lowell are so apposite, and seem to us so well considered, that we
quote from his opinion. "A petition
in invitum," says
he,
"to have a debtor adjudged bankrupt is for the benefit of all
his unsecured creditors, and a favorable decree gives them all a
proportionate advantage, and the court has no power to order, as is
often done in chancery, that this advantage shall depend upon their
contributing to the expenses of the suit, but any creditor may
carry on the proceedings if the petitioner should refuse to do so,
and after adjudication, all may prove their debts. In this case,
the fund from which the dividend will be paid is due entirely to
the exertions of the petitioners in setting aside the mortgage, and
in most cases, though not in this, no single creditor, nor any
three or four of them, have a sufficient interest to enable them to
undertake the conduct of the proceedings without positive loss of
money
Page 105 U. S. 535
if they cannot tax the expenses on the fund, for those expenses
will usually exceed the dividend on their debts. . . . The strong
equities of the petitioner's case are not difficult to discover,
and the practice under the act of 1841 was to allow such a charge
out of the assets, as I find by examining the records. My doubt was
of my power in the premises under the fee bill of 26th February,
1853, 10 Stat. 161, which does not appear to sanction it and does
appear to be intended to cover the whole ground of taxation of
costs at law and in equity and admiralty, and by the general
orders, these petitions follow the rule of cases in equity in all
matters of costs. Upon reflection, I have concluded that the fee
bill is probably intended to reach only taxable costs commonly so
called, and may have its full effect without being construed to
take away the power of a court of equity to permit counsel fees to
be taxed in those cases where a fund is in court upon or to which
different parties have distinct rights or claims. . . . I have been
referred to the record of a case in equity in the circuit court in
which Judge Sprague, since the passage of the fee bill, ordered the
counsel fees of all parties to be paid out of the fund, and Judge
Kane adopted a like rule in
Ex parte Plitt, 2 Wall.Jr.
453. These decisions, and those in bankruptcy already cited,
justify me in construing the statute in the way which the equities
of the case so clearly demand."
The views here expressed with regard to the application of the
fee bill to cases of this sort are undoubtedly correct. The fee
bill is intended to regulate only those fees and costs which are
strictly chargeable as between party and party, and not to regulate
the fees of counsel and other expenses and charges as between
solicitor and client, nor the power of a court of equity, in cases
of administration of funds under its control, to make such
allowance to the parties out of the fund as justice and equity may
require. The fee bill itself expressly provides that it shall not
be construed to prohibit attorneys, solicitors, and proctors from
charging to and receiving from their clients (other than the
government) such reasonable compensation for their services, in
addition to the taxable costs, as may be in accordance with general
usage in their respective states, or may be agreed upon between the
parties. Act of Feb. 26, 1853, c. 80,
Page 105 U. S. 536
10 Stat. 161; Rev.Stat., sec. 823. And the act contains nothing
which can be fairly construed to deprive the court of chancery of
its long established control over the costs and charges of the
litigation, to be exercised as equity and justice may require,
including proper allowances to those who have instituted
proceedings for the benefit of a general fund.
This Court, in the case of
Cowdrey v. Galveston, &c.
Railroad Co., 93 U. S. 352,
sustained an allowance of $5,000 for counsel fees to be paid to
counsel out of the proceeds of a railroad mortgage, foreclosed in
the Circuit Court for the District of Texas, being the amount
agreed by the trustees to be paid for instituting proceedings which
were discontinued by the intervention of the civil war. A new bill
was afterwards filed by some of the bondholders, and the fund was
brought into court, and the fee in question was directed to be paid
by the receiver. We regarded the charge as a proper one to be paid
out of the fund. Liberal allowances were also made by the circuit
court in the same case for counsel fees and other charges incurred
by the complainants in the cause, which were never brought to this
Court for review.
In the vast amount of litigation which has arisen in this
country upon railroad mortgages where various parties have
intervened for the protection of their rights and the fund has been
subjected to the control of the court and placed in the hands of
receivers or trustees, it has been the common practice, as well in
the courts of the United States as in those of the states, to make
fair and just allowances for expenses and counsel fees to the
trustees or other parties promoting the litigation and securing the
due application of the property to the trusts and charges to which
it was subject. Sometimes, no doubt, these allowances have been
excessive and perhaps illegal, and we would be very far from
expressing our approval of such large allowances to trustees,
receivers, and counsel as have sometimes been made and which have
justly excited severe criticism.
Still, a just respect for the eminent judges under whose
direction many of these cases have been administered would lead to
the conclusion that allowances of this kind, if made with
moderation and a jealous regard to the rights of those who are
Page 105 U. S. 537
interested in the fund, are not only admissible but agreeable to
the principles of equity and justice.
The subject of allowances to be made to trustees
eo
nomine is very fully examined in the books. An exhaustive
citation of both English and American authorities is to be found in
the notes to the case of
Robinson v. Pett, 2 White &
Tudor's Leading Cases in Equity 238, American edition, pp. 512-600;
and see Perry on Trusts, secs. 894, 910, 912.
It is unnecessary, however, to pursue the subject further. The
conclusion to which we have come is that under the circumstances of
this case, the circuit court had the power, in its discretion, to
allow to the complainant, Vose, his reasonable costs, counsel fees,
charges, and expenses incurred in the fair prosecution of the suit
and in reclaiming and rescuing the trust fund and causing it to be
subjected to the purposes of the trust. The allowances made for
these purposes we have examined, and do not find anything therein
seriously objectionable. The court below should have considerable
latitude of discretion on the subject, since it has far better
means of knowing what is just and reasonable than an appellate
court can have. It is not shown in this case by the appellants that
any of these allowances are excessive or that the expenditures
allowed were not fairly and honestly made.
But there is one class of allowances made by the court which we
consider decidedly objectionable. We refer to those made for the
personal services and private expenses of the complainant. In
England and some of the states, no such allowance is made even to
trustees
eo nomine. In other states it is. But the
complainant was not a trustee. He was a creditor, suing on behalf
of himself and other creditors for his and their own benefit and
advantage. The reasons which apply to his expenditures incurred in
carrying on the suit and reclaiming the property subject to the
trust do not apply to his personal services and private expenses.
We can find no authority whatever for any such charge by a person
in his situation. Where an allowance is made to trustees for their
personal services, it is made with a view to secure greater
activity and diligence in the performance of the trust, and to
induce persons of reliable character and business capacity to
Page 105 U. S. 538
accept the office of trustee. These considerations have no
application to the case of a creditor seeking his rights in a
judicial proceeding. It would present too great a temptation to
parties to intermeddle in the management of valuable property or
funds in which they have only the interest of creditors, and that
perhaps only to a small amount, if they could calculate upon the
allowance of a salary for their time and of having all their
private expenses paid. Such an allowance has neither reason nor
authority for its support.
We are of opinion, therefore, that the allowance for these
purposes was illegally made, and that to this extent the orders
should be reversed. We refer to the allowance in the last order, of
$15,003.35 for private expenses, and of $34,625 for personal
services. As to those items, the said last order will be reversed,
and in all other respects both of the orders appealed from will be
affirmed; and it is
So ordered.
MR. JUSTICE MILLER dissenting.
While I agree to the decree of the Court in this case, I do not
agree to the opinion so far as it is an argument in favor of a
principle of which is founded the grossest judicial abuse of the
present day -- namely the absorption of a property or a fund which
comes into the control of a court by making allowances for
attorneys' fees and other expenses pending the litigation, payable
out of the common fund, when it may be finally decided that the
party who employed the attorney, or incurred the costs, never had
any interest in the property or fund in litigation.
This system of paying from a man's property those engaged in the
effort to wrest it from him can never receive my approval, and as I
have had no opportunity to examine the authorities cited in the
opinion, I can do no more than protest against the doctrine.