Lowry Banking Co. v. Abbott & Smith
This text of 13 S.E. 204 (Lowry Banking Co. v. Abbott & Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Certain creditors of Wyly & Greene, through their counsel, Abbott & Smith, filed their petition in equity in the nature of a creditor’s bill, under §§3149(a) et seq., of the code, alleging the insolvency of Wyly & Greene, and praying for an injunction and for a receiver to take charge of their assets. The injunction was granted and a receiver appointed, who took charge of the assets and administered them, and brought a fund of $30,000 into court to be distributed to the creditors. After the petition was filed and the receiver appointed, the Lowry Banking Company made itself a party complainant, alleging that it had two mortgages, given it by Wyly & Greene, which were sufficient to cover the whole amount of the assets. The other creditors disputed the validity of these mortgages, but they were declared to be valid and binding upon the assets by the verdict of a jury on a trial where this issue was made. Before the fund was distributed, Abbott & Smith filed their application to the court, wherein they stated that they were the solicitors of the complainants who filed the petition against Wyly & Greene and obtained the order appointing the receiver, etc., that the receiver had collected the sum of $30,000, and that they represented [136]*136the receiver and advised him in many matters touching his receivership. They prayed the court to tax as costs against the fund the sum of $1,500 as counsel’s fees for bringing the fund into court; they alleged that they had been paid $250 on account of such service, by order of the court, and that'there was still due them the sum of $1,250. They asked a rule nisi requiring the Lowry Banking Company and the receiver to show cause why said sum should not be allowed them. To this rule the Lowry Banking Company demurred upon the grounds, (1) “that the court had no authority, without the verdict of a jury, to take a part of the fund in the hands of the receiver, covered by the mortgages to this respondent, and apply the same to the payment of fees of counsel ” ; and (2) “ that there was no law of Georgia authorizing fees to be paid out of a fund like this and upon a petition like this.” The Lowry Banking Company also answered the rule, setting up various reasons why the movants were not entitled to fees out of the fund. The court sustained the first ground of demurrer and referred the matter to a jury, and upon a trial of the issue the jury returned a verdict for $150 counsel fees. Abbott & Smith moved for a new trial, and it was granted by the court, and the Lowry Banking Company excepted.
Both parties filed exceptions pendente lite during the trial and assigned error on them here, but as the case is still pending in the court below, we cannot consider them now. Code, §4250. Judgment affirmed.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
13 S.E. 204, 87 Ga. 134, 1891 Ga. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lowry-banking-co-v-abbott-smith-ga-1891.