Garvin, Receiver v. Rappaport

25 N.E.2d 249, 216 Ind. 471, 1940 Ind. LEXIS 256
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 10, 1940
DocketNo. 27,324.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 25 N.E.2d 249 (Garvin, Receiver v. Rappaport) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garvin, Receiver v. Rappaport, 25 N.E.2d 249, 216 Ind. 471, 1940 Ind. LEXIS 256 (Ind. 1940).

Opinion

Fansler, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment allowing attorneys’ fees out of the funds of an insolvent bank. The receiver and two of those who have judg *473 merits payable out of the funds effected are appellants. The appellees, attorneys for certain claimants against the fund, presented the contentions of the claimants against objections of a general creditor in the trial court and on appeal.

The facts are not in dispute. The Meyer-Kiser Bank is being liquidated by a receiver. The assets have been reduced to cash and the total amount for distribution is $198,110.75. More-than 150 persons filed claims asserting a preference as against general creditors based upon chapter 167 of the Acts of 1931. These claims aggregated $263,647.60, and it was immediately apparent that if they should be allowed there would be nothing for general creditors. The appellees in this case represented 16 of these claimants, the aggregate of whose claims amounts to $150,331.86. Thirty-four of the claimants whose claims aggregated $81,976.25 were represented by other counsel. Approximately 100 claimants with claims aggregating $31,839.56 were not represented by counsel. All of the claims were set for trial on June 4th. Prior to that time counsel for the appellant First National Bank of Huntington had prepared and filed its claim and had investigated, and briefed the law involved. They attended the hearing, and, having consulted with the receiver and his attorney, it was agreed that judgment should be entered allowing the claim, and an order and decree to that effect was dictated to the court reporter with the understanding that the judge would approve the order and that it would be entered and the claim allowed. Appellants’ attorneys then left the courtroom and the city of Indianapolis. It appears,' or may reasonably be inferred, that the receiver and the court had reached the conclusion that all of the claims should be allowed as preferred.

*474 At this point a general creditor appeared and filed objections to the allowance of the claims. A large number of counsel representing claimants were present in court. The judge stated to counsel that it would be impossible to hear all of them and suggested that some of their number be selected to present the arguments of the preferred claimants. It does not appear what preparation the appellees or other counsel had made, but since they were there representing their clients it must be assumed that they were all prepared to present their claims. Pursuant to the court’s suggestion counsel in the courtroom designated the appellees who represented the larger claimants to present arguments in support of the claims. A brief having been filed by the objector the appellees prepared and filed briefs and argued the questions involved orally before the court. The court announced its decision in favor of the claimants and the conclusion that all of the preferred claims should be allowed, but suggested that because of the importance of the questions the court desired that a test case be appealed to the Supreme Court and that action on the other claims would be deferred and their disposition determined by the result of the test case. Pursuant to this suggestion, the appellees and the receiver and his counsel, with the approval of the court, selected one of the claims represented by one of the appellees and judgment was entered therein and an appeal perfected by the receiver. The appellees briefed and argued the case in this court and the judgment was affirmed. Garvin, Rec., v. Chadwick Realty Corp. (1937), 212 Ind. 499, 9 N. E. (2d) 268. Thereafter, upon the suggestion of the receiver that the case had been affirmed, all the claims were allowed.

Afterward the appellees filed a petition with the court asking that they be allowed compensation out of *475 the funds in the receiver’s hands for their services in connection with the allowance of the claims. The receiver, the appellant First National Bank of Huntington, and the appellant 36th and Meridian Realty Corporation, for itself and on behalf of all other preferred creditors, answered objecting to the allowance. There was a hearing upon stipulated facts and the appellees were allowed $22,500 for their services. The appeal is from this order.

There is no contention on the part of appellants that the services rendered by appellees were not worth $22,500. The fund is insufficient to pay all preferred creditors in full so that in effect the allowance is a charge pro rata against all of the preferred creditors. It is the appellants’ contention that appellees should be paid by their own clients who employed them and that the preferred claimants who had not employed the appellees, many of whom had employed other counsel who they must pay, should not be required to contribute to the compensation of appellees.

It is conceded to be the general and well established rule that each party must pay his own attorneys’ fees and that an attorney cannot look for compensation to one who has not employed him, but appellees contend that the rule does not conflict with an equitable rule which they assert to be “that those who share in a benefit which has been obtained at the expense of one or a part only of their number should justly share the expenses including attorneys fees by which they are enabled to benefit.” It is clear that appellees’ statement is too broad. An attorney who procures a new doctrine to be announced or a statute to be declared unconstitutional cannot have compensation from all who thereafter are victorious in their cases because of it. There is a well known rule that *476 where an attorney for one of a class has created or secured and brought into the custody of a court of equity a fund which inures not alone to the benefit of his client, but to all others in the class he may be compensated out of the fund; and conversely, where the attorney for one of a class having an interest in a trust fund intervenes for his client and saves the fund from being disbursed or dissipated or lost, he can be compensated out of the fund, but in these latter cases there is generally a trustee or receiver or other fiduciary in charge of the fund whose duty it is to protect it, and an attorney who has a client interested in the fund may not rush in to intervene where those lawfully charged with the preservation of the fund are pursuing reasonable means to preserve it, nor may he force himself in or be forced in to create or secure a fund for a trust where those primarily charged with the duty of securing it are taking reasonable means to that end.

In the instant case the fund was extant and definite. The only controversy involved the question of whether it should be paid to those who were asserting that they were entitled to a preference or to creditors generally. The appellees, however, contend that they procured the fund to be set aside for the payment of those asserting preferred claims only and that in that sense they created a fund for the benefit of the preferred claimants. But, if it be conceded that this is true, they were not alone in asserting the rights of the preferred claimants.

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Bluebook (online)
25 N.E.2d 249, 216 Ind. 471, 1940 Ind. LEXIS 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garvin-receiver-v-rappaport-ind-1940.