Inter-Southern Life Insurance v. McDaniel

19 S.W.2d 269, 159 Tenn. 478, 6 Smith & H. 478, 1928 Tenn. LEXIS 110
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 20, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 19 S.W.2d 269 (Inter-Southern Life Insurance v. McDaniel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Inter-Southern Life Insurance v. McDaniel, 19 S.W.2d 269, 159 Tenn. 478, 6 Smith & H. 478, 1928 Tenn. LEXIS 110 (Tenn. 1929).

Opinion

Me. Justice Chambliss,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is á bill of interpleader, admitted by the answer and decreed to have been properly filed as such. The fund, being the proceeds of an insurance policy, in the net sum, with interest to filing of the bill, of $2,559.13, was paid into the Court. The parties composed their differences and a Court decree was entered providing for distribution of the fund among the various claimants and for payment of the costs from the fund, but the defend-. *480 ants excepted to an allowance made by tbe Chancellor of $100 as a fee to the solicitor' filing the bill and have appealed. The rightfulness of this allowance is the sole question here.

The Chancellor followed Memphis Cold Storage Co. v. Woodson, 1 Tenn. App., 340, and counsel for appellee insists that his holding is supported also by Daniel v. Fain, 73 Tenn., 258. In the Memphis Cold Storage Company case, the insistence was that the feé should not be allowed because the litigation was unnecessary, to which the Court did not agree. Finding that the bill was properly sustained as a bill of interpleader, the Court said, “We think it well settled that the complainant filing the bill of interpleader is entitled to recover against the defendants reasonable solicitor’s fees,” — that the question of the amount only was then left open. No authorities are cited. Woodson had stored pecans with the Storage Company and taken its warehouse receipt. He sold a portion of the pecans to the Texas Pecan Shelling Company and a controversy arose between the parties over the goods. In this situation the bill was filed.

In Daniel v. Fain, supra, relied on for appellee, Fain was trustee of the fund under a will, and filed his bill for instruction of the Court in administration of his trust, etc. The bill was not a strict bill of interpleader, but in the nature thereof only, as said by Judge Cooper. Fain was clearly entitled to his expenses as trustee, including his counsel fees thus incurred. But the rule applicable to the administration of trusts created by wills does not authorize allowances to. counsel filing inter-pleader bills generally.

Moreover, we think it clear that the right to counsel fees does not necessarily follow a finding that the bill *481 lias been properly filed as an interpleader. More must appear. The particular facts of the case control, including the relationship of the parties and the responsibility for the conditions and controversy. In the Fain case, supra, the complainant was not a volunteer stakeholder nor a simple debtor. The original owner of the fund had by will devolved upon him a trust, which he could not be required to discharge, if in doubt, without the instructions of the Court. The fund was properly chargeable with his expenses. This rule is universal.

The justification for the deduction from the fund in the Memphis Cold Storage case appears to rest on the fact that the party who stored the pecans and received the receipt so acted as to cast doubt on his claims, and being thus responsible for the controversy and the filing of the bill, the charge against the fund was justified.

An analysis of apparently conflicting holdings touching; this right and practice suggests, as above indicated, that it is not the sustaining of a bill as an interpleader which, ipso facto, justifies allowance of fees to complainant’s solicitor, but a showing in the particular case of persuasive basic facts.

Counsel for appellants rely on the following decisions refusing such allowances: Helmken v. Meyer, 118 Ga. 657; Knights of Honor v. Selby, 153 N. C., 203, 69 S. W., 53; Temple v. Lawson, 19 Ark., 148; Modern Woodmen v. Conner, 129 Ill. App. 651; Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Kinsley, 192 Ill. App. 229 (which purports to quote from and follow Chapin v. Dake, 57 Ill., 295); and Insurance Co. v. Corbin, 12 Phila., 257.

It is urged, also, that Tennessee has no statute authorizing such allowances, and that no precedent therefor is found in the holdings of this Court; that on the *482 contrary the practice is, as set forth in State Fur. Co. v. Gennett, 1 Tenn. Chy., 100, when the bill is found to be properly filed, to dismiss the complainant with his costs, snch “costs” never including fees to counsel in this jurisdiction, whatever the term may have embraced under the English practice.

It. is apparent that some of the confusion in the authorities arises out of the varying effect given the term “costs.” Quite generally costs are allowed the complainant filing a proper interpleader, and, citing the rule thus expressed, some of the courts have proceeded to allow counsel fees. It must be conceded that the right to allow costs does not, under our practice, of itself include the right to allow fees to counsel. In Daniels Chy. P. & P. (5 Ed.), Yol. II, p. 1493 (Judge Cooper’s revision) it is said: “Where the plaintiff has brought a bill of in-terpleader, properly and in good faith against both the defendants, he will be entitled to his costs both in equity, and at law where he has been sued, out of the funds in his hands,” etc., citing authorities. The distinction between costs, as the term is used in our statutes and practice, and solicitor’s fees is not discussed.

After stating the rule as to costs generally, in 33 Corpus Juris, p. 470, it is said that, “According to many authorities, complainant is entitled, as a part of his costs, to an attorney’s fee commensurate .with the services of his counsel in the cause, eventually to fall on the claimant who was in the wrong and made the litigation necessary.” We have examined most of the numerous cases cited in the note. Some of them rest on controlling statutes, and, of course, are not authority beyond their jurisdiction, for example, Phoenix Ins. Co. v. Carey, 80 Conn., 426, 68 A., 993. Some were suits brought *483 for construction of trusts arising under wills, or otherwise, as for example, our case of Daniel v. Fain, supra, Morse v. Stearns, 131 Mass., 389, and the leading case of Trustees v. Greenough, 105 U. S., 627, 26 L. Ed., 1157. This case is perhaps most commonly cited for the rule allowing a fee from the fund for filing a bill of inter-pleader. But that proceeding related to a trust. It was said in the opinion that, “it is a general principle that a trust estate must bear the expenses of its administration.” Reference is made to the rule applied in general creditors’ suits where a fund has been realized or conserved by the diligence of the plaintiff. Quite properly participants in the benefits are required to contribute from the fund their proportion of the expenses. Morse v. Stearns, supra,

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Bluebook (online)
19 S.W.2d 269, 159 Tenn. 478, 6 Smith & H. 478, 1928 Tenn. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inter-southern-life-insurance-v-mcdaniel-tenn-1929.