In Re Coleman

91 S.E. 861, 106 S.C. 534, 1917 S.C. LEXIS 60
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 22, 1917
Docket9649
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 91 S.E. 861 (In Re Coleman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Coleman, 91 S.E. 861, 106 S.C. 534, 1917 S.C. LEXIS 60 (S.C. 1917).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Watts.

Miss Ann E. Rice died, leaving her last will and testament, to which she had added a codicil. She left as executors thereof William Coleman and F. M. Farr. When an application was made by them for a final settlement and discharge, Wallace and Barron and Mower filed their petition for coun *537 sel fees, and asking that the same be allowed them for services alleged to have been rendered the executors under contract made with them as executors of said will. The petitions were heard in the probate Court for Union county, and the probate Court disallowed the fee of Mower,' and allowed Wallace and Barron a fee of $5,000.00. From this decree an appeal was taken to the Circuit Court by Mr. Mower, by the executors of Miss Rice’s will, and by the appellants herein. After hearing this appeal, Judge Smith rendered his decree, affirming the decree of the probate Court as to the fee allowed Wallace and Barron, but modified it as to the fee claimed by Mower, and decreed that Mower should be paid a fee of $2,000.00. Spencer M. Rice, Thomas A. Rice, James G. Rice, Ida N. Perrin, Lizzie R. Wolfing, Agnes R. Peake, Kittie R.- Elliott, R. B. Rawls, C. T. Rawls, Susannah R. Carter, James Macfie, Wade H. Macfie, Reuben Rice Macfie, Spencer M. Macfie, Agnes Anderson and Mary J. Clarke by 18 exceptions duly filed question the correctness of the Circuit Court’s decree, and ask reversal of the same. Miss Rice died, leaving of force her last wifi and testament and a codicil thereto, which was duly admitted to probate in common form on September 1, 1908, in the office of the probate Court for Union county; the wifi was dated July 20, 1906, and the codicil February, 1908. On November 4, 1909, the appellants here filed their petition in the probate Court for Union county, praying that the executors thereof, William Coleman and F. M. Farr, be required to prove the alleged codicil of Miss Rice in solemn form, and on the same day an order was by the Court for that purpose, which was duly served. On November 23, 1909, the executors filed their petition, asking that they be required to prove both the wifi and codicil in due and solemn form of law.

The attorneys of record for the executors, as appears from the petition, were Shand & Shand, of Columbia, S. C.; Johnstone & Cromer, of Newberry, S. C., and S. Means *538 Beatty, of Union, S. C. The record shows that the only persons who answered the petition of the executors were the appellants herein, who contested the validity of the codicil, and Mrs. Eveline S. Rice and Mrs. Agnes Jeter, who appeared by their attorneys, Wallace & Barron, who insisted that both will and codicil were good and valid instruments. Mrs. Victoria S. Coleman, represented by Mower & Bynum, of Newberry, and Sawyer, Townsend & Townsend, of Union, S. C., answered and attacked the validity both of the will and codicil. The case was heard and decided in the probate Court, and an appeal taken therefrom to the Court of Common Pleas.

The recdrd shows that the case was never heard in the Circuit Court, but that the litigation was compromised by the parties in interest to the litigation, and not by the executors. The record shows conclusively, and there is not a particle of evidence to the contrary, that during the whole litigation in the probate Court and in the Court of Common Pleas up to the time of the compromise there is nothing to show or disclose the fact that Wallace & Barron represented the executors or any one else other than the parties whom they filed answers for. The only other litigation in the matter other than the proceedings in the probate Court and appeal to the Circuit Court therefrom was a proceeding by the appellants herein in the Court of Common Pleas for an injunction to restrain the executors from selling the real estate.

The matter was heard by Judge Sease, who refused the same; an appeal was taken to the Supreme Court, and judgment affirmed. So the whole litigation, up to the time of the compromise, was this: Injunction matter before Judge Sease, and appeal therefrom to the Supreme Court, and hearing in that Court; the litigation over the will and codicil in the probate Court; appeal therefrom to the Circuit Court; and a compromise before hearing in that Court between the parties. Eor this litigation what do the executors pay their lawyers? Mr. Shand was paid $5,000.00, and before that *539 time had been paid $500.00. Mr. Johnstone was paid $5,500. Mr. Beatty was paid $600.00, and it appears Mr. Wallace was paid $65.00. The appellants do not question or make any objection to these payments. All parties agree that they were proper.

The records disclose the facts that the respondents sent in their bills and made claim for services rendered in the litigation to some of the legatees, which claims were disputed and not paid. The record shows that the lawyers, employed unquestionably by the executors, Shand & Shand, Johnstone & Cromer, and Beatty, as well as the lawyers whose claims are disputed by the appellants, Wallace & Barron and Mower, are all capable lawyers of mental vigor and legal learning, energetic, and of integrity and strength, and any two of them could have handled the estate with consummate ability and skill, and could have done everything that was necessary for the legal settlement of the same.

1 The executors had the right to employ such legal talent as they approved of, but they do not have the right to employ an unnecessary number of lawyers and pay them with the estate’s funds. When a number of lawyers are employed it is incumbent on the executors to show the necessity for employing such an extraordinary number to be paid a high price by the estate. We cannot see in any view of the case if the executors had employed Shand & Shand, Johnstone & Cromer, and Beatty why they wanted additional counsel, unless they intended to pay. them out of their own pockets and not mulct the estate. Our view is the same about Wallace & Barron and Mower; if the executors employed them, then there would have been no necessity for the employment of the others.

*540 2 *539 The estate of the deceased looks large on paper and by the appraise bill, but the amount of the estate is not the *540 criterion by which a lawyer’s fee should be fixed. It is from the benefits derived from the lawyer’s talent and the . labor, learning and skill involved and displayed in the management of the necessary litigation and the avoidance of litigation that is unprofitable. We cannot see how the payment of the $11,665 to the attorneys employed whose employment by the executors is not disputed and-which payment is acquiesced in by the appellants, is not a sufficient and liberal, compensation for services rendered on the litigation; to allow more would be too great a tax and burden on the estate, and make it potential for an executor by the employing of a number of high-priced lawyers to eat up any estate.

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Related

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168 S.E. 705 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1933)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 S.E. 861, 106 S.C. 534, 1917 S.C. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-coleman-sc-1917.