Hopple v. Hopple

4 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 255
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedNovember 27, 1903
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 255 (Hopple v. Hopple) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hopple v. Hopple, 4 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 255 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1903).

Opinion

The action below was by Casper Y. T. Plopple against the defendant, Sara PI. Plopple, to have her declared a trustee for him of a large amount of real estate in this city.

[256]*256The petition alleged that on different occasions prior to July, 1898, Casper ITopple conveyed by deeds to Sara II. ITopple a large number of pieces of real estate—

“Under the express' understanding and trust, to which the defendant, Sara. IT. Hopple, assented and agreed and then and there received the deeds under said agrément and trust, that is to say, as follows:
“Said property was to be held by said Sara IT. Hopple as the property of Casper V. T. Hopple, the plaintiff herein, and for his use and benefit, and the proceeds thereof were to be held and collected and accounted for as the property of the said Casper V. T. Hopple the same as if he had not transferred and conveyed the legal title of record to the said Sara IT. Hopple; and the said Sara IT. Hopple was to hold the said property for said Casper’s use and benefit and not for her own. ’ ’

The prayer of the petition was that-the defendant, Sara H. Hopple, be declared to hold the property according to the trust above set forth and for such other relief as he might be entitled to.

Sara IT. Hopple in her answer denied that the conveyance made to her by plaintiff were made under' any express understanding and trust, and denied that she received deeds for the same under any agreement and trust; on the contrary she alleged that the conveyances made to her were absolute.

After a protracted trial the court found from the evidence that the several deeds mentioned in the petition were not intended by the plaintiff to be absolute conveyances but as deeds conveying the real estate to Sara IT. Hopple in trust for the plaintiff; and that the terms of the trust were that she would always hold the property for the support and maintenance of the plaintiff, Casper Y. T. ITopple, and the defendant, Sara H. Hopple, his wife, and their only child, William Hopple.

It was further ordered that inasmuch as Sara H. Hopple had denied the said trust and refused to carry out the same that within thirty days after the entering of the decree she should convey the property to Casper V. T. Hopple, or in default of such conveyance the decree should operate as such conveyance.

[257]*257It was further ordered that plaintiff pay to Sara IT. Ilopple for her support and maintenance the sum of one hundred and twenty-five dollars ($125) per month during her natural life and should pay to her three hundred dollars ($300) a year for the maintenance and support of the said William Hopple until he should reach the age of twenty-one years.

It. was further decreed that the amount to be paid to Sara H. Hopple for herself and son should be a lien and perpetual charge upon all the real estate ordered to be conveyed by Sara IT. Hopple to the plaintiff.

The decree then follows with these two clauses:

“And it is further ordered that the sum of five thousand dollars ($5,000) be allowed as counsel fees herein to Edward Colston and Wallace Burch for their services herein rendered, and that the same be made and taxed as a part of the costs of the case.
“It is further ordered by the court that ail the costs of this case including the counsel fees aforesaid be, and the same are hereby made a charge and lien ripon the premises and property involved herein and ordered to be conveyed to the plaintiff by the defendant, Sara H. Hopple, and payable out of the same, ahead of and prior to and preferable to any other lien or liens therein provided for, and execution or other proper process for the collection thereof is hereby awarded.”

The plaintiff in error excepts to the decree of the court as a final determination of the rights of the parties except the part which taxes the fee of counsel for plaintiff as part of the costs of the case and makes the same a lien upon the property prior to the charges upon it made by the decree in favor of herself and her son; and prosecutes error for a reversal of those parts of the decree.

The general rule is that the attorney’s fees of parties to apy suit are not taxable as costs (5 Ency. of Pl. and Practice, 228, Section 2; Constant v. Matteson et al, 22 Ill., 546-560; Otoe County v. Brown, 16 Neb., 397-398).

And as a general rule where land is recovered by an action at law or in equity, counsel fees for the party so recovering title are not taxable as costs (McCullough v. Flourny, 69 Ala., [258]*258189; Higley v. White et al, 102 Ala., 604; Hanger et al v. Fowler, 20 Ark., 667; Humphrey et al v. Browning, 46 Ill., 476; Martin v. Harrington, 57 Miss., 208; Smalley et al v. Clark et al, 22 Vt., 598; McCoy v. McCoy el al, 36 W. Va., 772).

In partition actions, although brought for the benefit of all parties, counsel fees are not taxable as costs in the absence of special statute (Strawn v. Strawn et al, 46 Ill., 412; 82 Pa. St., 2329; Keefe v. Fitzhugh, 83 Tenn., 49).

The defendant in error, however, admitting the force of the authorities above cited, contends that they have no application to the ease at bar, for the reason that a trust is involved and in such a case the fees of the plaintiff’s counsel are taxed as a part of the costs.

The defendant in error has cited a large number of authorities which are claimed to authorize the charge made in this case. It is not necessary to examine them in detail, because they are capable of classification as follows:

First. Suits brought by a trustee to protect or recover a trust estate in which case the fees of counsel are charged against the estate as part of the costs.

. The principle declared in this class of cases is elementary and needs no citation of authorities.

Second. Suits where one of many parties having a common 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.

The leading ease illustrating this principle is Trustee v. Greenough, 105 U. S., 527. In that case bonds were issued by a corporation secured by a trust fund which the trustee was wasting or misapplying and which he refused or neglected to apply to the payment of the bonds. A holder of a portion of them who in good faith filed a bill to secure a due application of the fund and succeeded in bringing it under the control of the court for the common benefit of the bondholders was held entitled to be paid from the fund before its distribution, his costs as between solicitor and client.

[259]*259Third. Suits instituted by creditors of an insolvent estate to set aside conveyances made by the debtor giving certain creditors a preference over other creditors, which suit is resisted by the preferred creditors. In such cases the counsel fees of the contesting creditors is paid out of the trust estate.

A ease typical of this class is that of Meed’s Estate, 163 Pa. St., 595. In that case the allowance was resisted on the ground that the preferred creditors had not been benefited by the action. The court answered the contention by declaring that—

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Related

Trustees v. Greenough
105 U.S. 527 (Supreme Court, 1882)
McCullough v. Flournoy
69 Ala. 189 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1881)
Higley v. White
102 Ala. 604 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1893)
Smalley v. Clark
22 Vt. 598 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1850)
McCoy v. McCoy
15 S.E. 973 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1892)
Otoe County v. Brown
16 Neb. 394 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1884)
Constant v. Matteson
22 Ill. 546 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1859)
Strawn v. Strawn
46 Ill. 412 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1868)
Humphrey v. Browning
46 Ill. 476 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1868)
Martin v. Harrington
57 Miss. 208 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1879)
Keith v. Fitzhugh
83 Tenn. 49 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1885)

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Bluebook (online)
4 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hopple-v-hopple-ohsuperctcinci-1903.