Fraiman Estate

184 A.2d 494, 408 Pa. 442, 1962 Pa. LEXIS 524
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 25, 1962
DocketAppeal, 91
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 184 A.2d 494 (Fraiman Estate) 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
Fraiman Estate, 184 A.2d 494, 408 Pa. 442, 1962 Pa. LEXIS 524 (Pa. 1962).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Benjamin R, Jones,

Whether the court below abused its discretion (1) in allowing a $16,500 fee to counsel for services rendered in the settlement of a decedent’s estate and (2) in refusing to remove a testamentary trustee are the questions presented on this appeal.

Charles Fraiman (decedent), a resident of Montgomery County, died testate on February 10, 1959. Under the terms of his will, the decedent, after making a $1000 bequest to an employee, created a trust of the entire residue of his estate under which, in perpetuity, the entire net income is to be paid to Yeshiva University in New York (Yeshiva). Benjamin Cohen, a close *444 friend of decedent, was named executor in the will and Attorney Melvin Rubin, the scrivener of the will, was named sole trustee and counsel for the executor.

Decedent’s estate, inventoried at 1282,00o, 1 consisted of a scrap yard business, five parcels of real estate of which four were rent producing, several U. S. savings bonds, four bank and savings accounts and a claim against the Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission.

Mr. Rubin acted as counsel to the executor and handled the various matters connected with the settlement of the estate until March 1960 at which time, as the result of a disagreement between Mr. Rubin and the executor, the latter secured other counsel. In the meantime, Mr. Rubin had prepared, with the aid of an accountant, 2 a first and final account which the executor’s new counsel filed in the Orphans’ Court of Montgomery County. At the same time a supplemental account was filed which brought up to date the first and final account and particularly reflected the sale of all decedent’s realty within a month after the executor’s new counsel was secured.

Upon filing of the account, Mr. Rubin presented a claim in the amount of $28,200 for legal services rendered to the estate. 3 Both Teshiva and the Attorney General of the Commonwealth 4 filed objections to the *445 amount of this fee. The Attorney General also filed a petition for the substitution of a new trustee in place of Mr. Bubin to which Mr. Bubin filed preliminary objections. After the court sustained these preliminary objections the Attorney General did not press the matter further. Yeshiva, however, presented a petition to the court challenging distribution of the estate to Mr. Bubin as trustee and requesting Mr. Rubin’s removal as trustee. After the taking of testimony, the court below reduced the requested counsel fee from $28,200 to $16,500 5 and refused to remove Mr. Bubin as trustee. From that decree this appeal was taken.

In passing upon the amount of counsel fee we bear in mind the well settled principle that: “Supervision of the amount of compensation is peculiarly within the discretion of the court below. Unless such discretion is clearly abused, the judgment will not be disturbed on appeal”: Faust Estate, 364 Pa. 529, 530, 73 A. 2d 369. See also: Bennett Estate, 366 Pa. 232, 237, 238, 77 A. 2d 607; Williamson Estate, 368 Pa. 343, 357, 82 A. 2d 49; Bickel Appeal, 388 Pa. 270, 277, 130 A. 2d 498; Taulane Estate, 408 Pa. 19, 22, 23, 182 A. 2d 765. The question now before us is whether the court below abused its discretion in fixing Mr. Rubin’s counsel fee at $16,500?

We start our examination of this record with the assumption, expressed by the court below, that Mr. Bubin, during the time he was counsel to the executor of this estate, exhibited “diligence and industry” and “did a thorough and competent job”. Such adherence to the conduct fully expected of every counsel for an estate justifies commendation but it does not justify an unfair or unjust fee. That the original fee claimed by Mr. Rubin in the amount of $28,200 was exorbitant is *446 clear beyond any question and the court bel ow very properly rejected the amount of the fee claimed. Our inquiry is whether the court below sufficiently reduced the fee.

■ In justification of his fee, Mr. Rubin testified to the services which he rendered in the settlement of this estate and presented to the court a memorandum consisting of 66 typewritten pages, single spaced and of legal size. On this memorandum were noted letters written, conferences, phone calls, etc., all purporting to show that Mr. Rubin spent between 1500 and 2000 hours in the settlement of this estate. In respect to this we are in full agreement with the statement of the court below: “. . . this court gave much consideration to the inexperience of counsel in setting the fee. The following language is used . . . [in the] adjudication. ‘A more experienced attorney could have accomplished a similar result in much less time. The hours spent by Mr. Rubin therefore have not overimpressed the court on setting the fee but the court commends Mr. Rubin for his diligence and industry! ' The evidence indicates that Mr. Rubin spent much time conferring with other attorneys seeking' advice which would have been unnecessary to a more. experienced attorney. For this reason, this court refused to place very much weight on the testimony of Mr. Rubin to the effect that he spent between 1500 and 2000 hours in administering the estate. Although the auditing judge commended Mr. Rubin for his diligence and industry, no compensation was allowed for time spent Teaming his job’.”

The instant record presents in great detail all the services which Mr. Rubin claims to have rendered and the problems involved in settlement of this estate. So far as decedent’s realty was concerned it appears that Mr. Rubin performed duties which would ordinarily be performed by the personal representative, rather than the counsel* of an estate and that he collected the. *447 rents, arranged for maintenance and repair and generally managed the realty. While he did make some efforts to sell the realty, such efforts, as reflected by the record, were not as effective as they might have been. At the time of decedent’s death he had employed Joseph K. Fornance, Esq. to handle a claim against the Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission and in that proceeding a board of view made an award to decedent of $40,800 which had been reduced on appeal by the Commission to $35,000. This matter was being handled by competent counsel, chosen by the decedent, and it is very difficult to understand the necessity for Mr. Rubin to consult with “specialists in the condemnation field to determine the best course of action in regard to this matter” as he claims to have done. The closing of the bank accounts and the sale of the U. S. savings bonds presented no unusual or extraordinary problem and are matters common in the settlement of most estates. As to the scrap business it appears that, largely through Mr. Rubin’s efforts, a sale was effected for $25,090, “a highly beneficial result” as the court below termed it. Outside of the scrap business sale and perhaps the preparation of an opinion in construction of the will, our

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Bluebook (online)
184 A.2d 494, 408 Pa. 442, 1962 Pa. LEXIS 524, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fraiman-estate-pa-1962.