Estate of McDonald

99 P.2d 1115, 37 Cal. App. 2d 521, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 562
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 28, 1940
DocketCiv. 2506
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 99 P.2d 1115 (Estate of McDonald) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of McDonald, 99 P.2d 1115, 37 Cal. App. 2d 521, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 562 (Cal. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

THOMSON, J., pro tem.

This is an appeal from an order allowing attorneys’ fees for extraordinary services in the *523 above-entitled estate matter. The respondents filed in said estate matter a petition for attorneys’ fees for extraordinary services, praying for an allowance of $40,000 or “forty per cent of the properties and monies” awarded to the estate by a judgment in a superior court action brought by the administratrix against 15 defendants, in which action the administratrix was represented by petitioners as her attorneys. Upon the filing of said petition for attorneys’ fees, the administratrix appeared through special counsel and filed objections to any allowance of attorneys’ fees for extraordinary services. A hearing was had at which the administratrix was present in person and was represented by said special counsel. Evidence was adduced and the court made an order by which it found that petitioners had successfully maintained said action and a judgment was entered in said case whereby the administratrix recovered nine parcels of real property and certain monies, “together with the rents, issues and profits of said properties thereafter accruing”; that the properties so recovered were appraised in the estate by the inheritance tax appraiser in the sum of $97,852.14, and “against which said several pieces of real property there appears to be debts and delinquent taxes of approximately the sum of $27,000 ’ ’; that the assets of the estate, other than the properties so recovered, are appraised at $540.50; and that an appeal from said judgment by two of the defendants is pending. In this connection it should be noted that, since the order for attorneys’ fees was made, said appeal has been dismissed and said judgment has become final. In the order for attorneys’ fees the court included the following provisions: “It is further ordered that M. G. Brittan, J. W. Heard, Jr., and Calvin H. Conron, Jr., are jointly entitled to be allowed and paid for extraordinary services rendered in said action a sum equal to thirty-five per cent (35%) of the net value of all properties and monies, together with the accruing rents, issues and profits thereon and thereof, now recovered or which may be recovered or received and become a part of the above-entitled estate by reason or on account of said action . . . which fee is hereby allowed for the services of said attorneys so rendered to and including the first day of December, 1938, and which said fee the Court hereby determines to be a just and reasonable fee for said services so rendered.

*524 “It is further ordered, adjudged and decreed that the basis for determination of the net value of said properties shall be the net value of the property and/or properties at the time such property and/or properties be finally, in said action, adjudicated a part and parcel of said estate, ...” Said order sets out a particular description of “the properties and monies” therein referred to, including the following paragraph. “Monies. The sum of $8,142.14 royalty monies paid to and deposited with Anglo California National Bank, Bakersfield Branch, as of October 7, 1938, by Bishop Oil Company, a corporation, pursuant to stipulation and order of court made and entered in said action . . . together with all additional and accruing royalty and/or other moneys so paid and deposited subsequent to said October 7, 1938.”

The form of order for attorneys’ fees is a novel one. No authorities have been cited, nor has the court discovered any, which approve or condemn this method of allowing attorneys’ fees in a probate matter.

Appellant first attacks the order allowing attorneys’ fees on the ground that the order is ultra vires and void, and in this connection appellant argues that the order is too indefinite and uncertain to be capable of enforcement; and that it is, for all practical purposes, a contingent fee and therefore void. We are in accord with these contentions. Section 910 of the Probate Code provides as follows:

“Attorneys for executors and administrators shall be allowed out of the estate, as fees for conducting the ordinary probate proceedings, the same amounts as are allowed by the previous article as commissions to executors and-administrators ; and such further amount as the court may deem just and reasonable for extraordinary services.”

The material portion of section 911 of the Probate Code is as follows:

“Any attorney who has rendered services to an executor or administrator, at any time after six months from the issuance of letters testamentary or of administration, and upon such notice ... as the court or a judge thereof shall require, may apply to the court for an allowance upon his fees; and on the hearing the court shall make an order requiring the executor or administrator to pay such attorney out of the estate such compensation, on account of services rendered up to that time, *525 as the court shall deem proper, and such payment shall be made forthwith.”

Under the provisions of section 911 of the Probate Code respondents had the right to petition the court for an order requiring the administratrix to pay them out of the estate a just and reasonable fee for extraordinary services performed by them for the benefit of the estate, and the court had the jurisdiction to allow such an amount as seemed to the court just and reasonable, such payment to be made forthwith. The final clause of section 911 to the effect that such payment shall be made forthwith has been interpreted to mean that prompt payment should be made when there are available funds in the estate from which the obligation may be satisfied. (Zagoren v. Hall, 122 Cal. App. 460, 465 [10 Pac. (2d) 202].) It seems obvious from the wording of these sections of the Probate Code, however, that the allowance for attorneys’ fees to be made by the court under the code provisions should be a definite, fixed and certain cash allowance, and not a percentage of the value of assets recovered or to be recovered for the estate, particularly of assets which are not yet finally a part of the estate and which might not become or remain a part of the estate, which was the situation in the instant case at the time the order was made. The order appealed from did not actually allow or fix a fee or an amount of compensation as provided in sections 910 and 911 of the Probate Code, but rather adopted a formula or gauge or measure for determining the amount of the fee to be allowed at some future time, perhaps by some other judge, upon the happening of a future, uncertain and speculative contingency, namely, a successful termination of the appeal in the action brought by the administratrix for the recovery of property. There is no doubt that the probate court has authority to make an order authorizing an administrator to employ counsel and provide that the attorneys’ fees shall be fixed at a future time upon the completion of the services. (Ludwig v. Superior Court, 217 Cal. 499, 501 [19 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
99 P.2d 1115, 37 Cal. App. 2d 521, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-mcdonald-calctapp-1940.