Estate of McClatchy

424 A.2d 1227, 492 Pa. 352, 1981 Pa. LEXIS 618
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 27, 1981
Docket412
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 424 A.2d 1227 (Estate of McClatchy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of McClatchy, 424 A.2d 1227, 492 Pa. 352, 1981 Pa. LEXIS 618 (Pa. 1981).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

ROBERTS, Justice.

This is an appeal from a decree of the Orphans’ Court Division of the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County directing final distribution of the estate of John H. McClatchy. The decree also dismissed the exceptions of appellants, executors of the estate of Marie J. Mecke (a *354 daughter and heir of decedent McClatchy), to the second and third accounts of appellees, executors of the McClatchy estate. 1 Appellants’ sole claim is that the auditing judge erred in allowing a total of $44,000 in counsel fees to be charged against the estate. Appellants allege that $19,000 of this amount represents compensation for services to the executors individually, not to the estate, and thus should have been paid personally by appellees.

This is the second time that we have been asked to consider such a claim in connection with appellees’ administration of this estate, see McClatchy Estate, 433 Pa. 232, 249 A.2d 320 (1969). As we did eleven years ago, we hold again today that the auditing judge did not abuse his discretion in allowing the full amount of counsel fees for the complex and lengthy administration of this estate to be charged against the estate. Accordingly, the decree is affirmed.

Most of the relevant facts of this controversy are recounted and considered in our 1969 opinion. In that proceeding, certain heirs of John H. McClatchy, not including the present appellants’ decedent, argued numerous objections to appellee executors’ first account of the estate, all of which were decided in favor of appellees. 2 There, in addressing the appellants’ contention that the $25,000 of paid and projected counsel fees listed in the first account was excessive and that the excess represented compensation for services to the executors individually, we adopted and quoted the view of Auditing Judge Taxis:

“ ‘We agree that the major issues raised by these objections have related to the ownership of property claimed by the executors as their own. The fact that the objectors raised these issues, however, is not the fault of the executors, and the questions here under discussion could take on a serious mien only if the executors and their attorneys claimed additional fees for the present litigation which they have not. The executors and their counsel should *355 certainly be compensated for the ordinary and normal work which they have done, and the responsibility assumed, which in an estate of this size, is considerable. Probate, advertising, tax returns, and accounting are only some of the matters which have to date been handled by the executors and their attorneys. The fees and compensation claimed are in amounts which would be fair and reasonable had no extraordinary problems arisen in the estate.’ We therefore reject appellants’ contention that these fees were improper.”

433 Pa. at 239-40, 249 A.2d at 323-24.

The present appellants now argue that because the total of counsel fees has risen to $44,000, the question of fees has taken on the “serious mien” envisioned by Judge Taxis in his 1967 opinion. They do not argue that $44,000 is an unreasonable total fee for the work performed. Rather, alleging that $25,000 is the usual fee for services of counsel on behalf of similar estates, they contend that, absent a showing by appellees to the contrary, the excess must be presumed to represent compensation for services on behalf of the executors individually and thus should not have been paid by the estate.

At the December 1977 hearing on this issue, appellants presented no evidence that counsel for the estate had in fact performed any services for the executors individually. Instead they offered the testimony of a practitioner in decedents’ estates that “absent unusual complications,” the “normal, proper” counsel fee for services to an estate like that of John H. McClatchy would be “on the order of twenty to twenty-five thousand dollars.” 3 On cross-examination, appellants’ witness admitted that he was unfamiliar with many of the myriad complexities in the administration of the McClatchy estate and that his opinion was based only on a reading of the three accounts prepared by the executors and two of the several opinions rendered over the years in the collection of controversies surrounding this estate. Appellants then concluded their presentation with the follow *356 ing statement: “It is our position that, having produced testimony as to what would be a reasonable fee in the circumstances, that if there are extraordinary services performed, it is the burden of the accountants [appellees] to produce testimony of that.” 4

With nearly twenty years of judicial involvement in the administration of the McClatchy estate, Judge Taxis replied that he had no need of such testimony, for he knew from his first-hand experience and his familiarity with the entire record that “extraordinary services” had in fact been rendered and that these services had been performed on behalf of the estate. As this Court did before, we again accept and set forth the findings of the orphans’ court:

“Happily, this Court has been the Judge involved in all matters before the lower court in the John H. McClatchy Estate which has been in administration for approximately eighteen-and-a-half years. During that course of time this Court has first-hand knowledge of the many conferences conducted by the Court preparatory to the trials conducted by this Court, the memorandum opinions written by this Court and, on one occasion, affirmed by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. To say the least, this is an estate in which extraordinary services were performed by counsel in defense of this estate. At the outset, forty-three objections were filed to the administration of this estate, ten of which were heard by the Court. The other thirty-three were withdrawn as a result of many conferences with counsel for the contending parties. It would serve no purpose to detail in full all of the problems confronted by the executors and the defense of the estate by counsel for the executors. In broad outline some of the children and grandchildren of this decedent were unhappy and disappointed by the way in which this decedent elected to dispose of his interests in corporations and their inability to accept the decedent’s decisions in an estate which at one time grossed approximately $8,000,000. Suffice it to say that the Court has considered the objections *357 filed in light of the criteria to be employed as set forth in LaRocca Est., 431 Pa. 542, at 546, [246 A.2d 337, at 339.][ 5 ] This Court is satisfied beyond any doubt that services of counsel represented] services of extraordinary nature on behalf of the estate and that the $19,000 charged for the same are not only fair and reasonable in amount but indeed modest.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
424 A.2d 1227, 492 Pa. 352, 1981 Pa. LEXIS 618, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-mcclatchy-pa-1981.