McPherson v. United States

245 F. 35, 157 C.C.A. 331, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1457
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 1, 1917
DocketNo. 2867
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 245 F. 35 (McPherson v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McPherson v. United States, 245 F. 35, 157 C.C.A. 331, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1457 (6th Cir. 1917).

Opinion

KNAPPEN, Circuit Judge.

On April 10, 1915, the United States filed its amended bill in equity in the court below, alleging that the Capital City D'airy Company, of Columbus, Ohio, had defrauded the government out of large sums of money in connection with the manufacture and sale of artificially colored oleomargarine, through the payment of a tax of only one-quarter of a cent per pound applicable to the uncolored product, instead of 10 cents per pound to which artificially colored oleomargarine was subject; further alleging due estimate, as* sessment, and levy against-the Dairy Company of a tax of more than $2,000,000 on account of those frauds, and the lien of the United States thereunder on all the Dairy Company’s property, the sale under the. levy of all that .company’s tangible property (leaving more than [37]*37$1,800,000 still unpaid), the conversion by stockholders of the company’s assets through the receipt of dividends not paid out of profits, the company’s abandonment of its business, its insolvency, and its lack of assets except the sums misappropriated by stockholders; and praying for the appointment of a receiver, with authority to collect from stockholders the sums so misappropriated, and to apply the same toward the payment of the remaining lien of the United States. (The original bill had been filed February 5, 1915.)

The appellants McPherson and Burns, who were then respectively United States Attorney and Assistant United States Attorney for the Southern district of Ohio, signed the bill as solicitors for plaintiff. Nine days later Edward E. Taylor, Jr., was duly appointed receiver of the Dairy Company’s assets, with authority to recover all property interests of the Dairy Company, and Messrs. McPherson and Burns were, on the court’s own motion, designated as counsel for the receiver, “on account of the knowledge possessed by [them] of the matters affecting the defendant, its officers and stockholders.” Two days later the receiver, under special leave granted, filed through appellants, as his solicitors and counsel, his bill against several stockholders of the Dairy Company, including Dennis Kelly, as well as representatives of the estates of two deceased stockholders and the wife of Dennis Kelly, to recover (and apply to the debt of the United States) corporate moneys fraudulently misappropriated and concealed.

In September, previous to the filing of the original bill for receivership, several of the defendants had been indicted in the District Court below on account of the frauds involved in the receivership suit. The indictments were still pending, and appellants were actively connected with the prosecutions, under direction of a special assistant to the Attorney General, and expected to take part in the trials which were soon to occur.

On April 28, 1915, seven days after the receiver’s bill against the stockholders was filed, an offer of $400,000, made by the defendants other than the Pirrung estate, in settlement of the civil liability of all defendants except that estate, was accepted by the Attorney General, the defendants in that connection to pay the costs. This offer and this settlement were made and discussed at a conference in the office of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, at which were present the Commissioner, his solicitor, the collector of internal revenue for the Southern district of Ohio, the receiver of the Dairy Company, Mr. Herron of the Attorney General’s staff, the appellant McPherson, United States Attorney and solicitor for the receiver, and two counsel for the compromising defendants, as well as another official representing the government. Nine days after this conference and compromise, the various defendants involved filed a formal answer to the receiver’s bill, and on the same day the receiver reported to the court and recommended the acceptance of the offer of “$400,000, and costs herein to this date, taxable against the last above named defendants, said costs to include such compensation for the receiver herein and fees for his attorneys as this court may order and direct to be paid.” The receiver’s recommendation was approved by the court, and on the following day [38]*38(May 8th) the court fixed tire receiver’s compensation at $20,000, and. that of the appellants, as attorneys for the receiver, at $20,000 in the aggregate. These two items of compensation were immediately paid by the defendants, in connection with the payment of the first installment of the compromise payment.

On June 1st the Attorney General moved to vacate the allowance to both the receiver and his counsel, whereupon each of the three persons concerned placed in the hairds of the court the amount of the fee awarded and paid him, and expressed in writing his willingness that the court reconsider its allowance of fees and make such order as the facts might warrant.

The principal grounds of the Attorney General’s motion (so far as counsel fees are concerned) were that appellants’ service in question was an official service in an action to enforce a civil liability to the United States, for which compensation other than the official salary is forbidden; that the settlement involved the compromise of an alleged violation of the internal revenue laws, for which United States attorneys are forbidden to receive compensation; that appellants’ relations to "the pending criminal cases made such payment of counsel fees improper ; that the order for payment was made without previous notice to the United States; and that the compensation allowed appellants was grossly excessive. The Attorney General also asked the annulment of the original designation of appellants as counsel for the receiver, for the reason that the action in which the receiver was appointed was begun by appellants as attorneys for the United States as plaintiffs, and that accordingly -their appointment as attorneys for the receiver was improper.

[1] Hearing was at once had upon the Attorney General’s motion, and resulted in an opinion by the District Judge that appellants were, in the prosecution of the receiver’s suit, acting in their official capacity as United States Attorney and Assistant United States Attorney respectively, and so were not entitled to receive compensation other than their official salaries; also that the Attorney General had not consented to the payment of such compensation. The United States thereupon disclaiming right to the $20,000 paid appellants, and Daniel Kelly then applying for the same, the amount was returned to him, on his giving bond to pay appellants so much of the $20,000 as might thereafter be allowed to one or both of them.' The question of the receiver’s compensation was reserved by the court. Its order denying compensation to Messrs. McPherson and Burns is before us for review, both on appeal and writ of error. We think appeal the proper remedy, and the writ of error will be dismissed.

A further statement of facts will assist in an understanding of the controversy: On April 20, 1915, the day before the receiver’s bill was actually filed, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue and the Attorney General were advised by appellant McPherson of the appointment of himself and appellant Burns as attorneys for the receiver; it appears that at the compromise conference in the Commissioner’s office, when appellant McPherson stated that he would leave his fees to tire court, Mr. Herron said that he (McPherson) “could not get anything for what [39]*39he had done prior to his appointment as attorney for the receiver”; that Mr. McPherson replied, “Of course not,” and that Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
245 F. 35, 157 C.C.A. 331, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcpherson-v-united-states-ca6-1917.