Novy v. Novy

188 A. 328, 324 Pa. 362, 1936 Pa. LEXIS 525
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 2, 1936
DocketAppeal, 161
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 188 A. 328 (Novy v. Novy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Novy v. Novy, 188 A. 328, 324 Pa. 362, 1936 Pa. LEXIS 525 (Pa. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Kephart,

Two heirs of Christina Novy brought partition proceedings in equity, which were contested by the remain *364 ing four heirs. The court ordered partition and appointed a master to conduct the proceedings, dividing the land among the heirs if possible, if not, to value it and report. From this order an appeal was taken by defendants, which was non-prossed. The master’s preliminary report dividing the estate into six equal purparts was approved nisi by the court after exceptions filed thereto had been dismissed. A second appeal to this Court was taken from the order confirming the master’s report and it was affirmed. Three of the defendants jointly made bids for all purparts above the valuation and they were awarded to them by the master. The bidders made no effort to comply with the award, whereupon the master and counsel for plaintiffs petitioned the court to tax their fees as costs. The defendants protested the counsel fees, but the court taxed them in the sum of $2500, together with a master’s fee of <$2000.

Thereafter the master presented what is termed an interlocutory report setting forth the award of the purparts to the three bidders, with a calculation of owelty, taxes, liens, charges and costs. This report was confirmed nisi, and, exceptions having been filed as to the calculations, the court sustained most of them and referred the report back to the master for further consideration, with the suggestion that additional testimony be taken to clarify the record concerning the exceptions. As the proceedings had been pending since 1931, the master also was ordered to close them promptly.

None of the parties attended further hearings as there had been an amicable adjustment of their difficulties. The master reported this agreement in a petition and asked for a rule upon the parties to show cause why one of the properties of the estate, embracing three of the six purparts, should not be sold for the payment of costs, including the master’s and counsel fees. Defendants resisted the rule, contending that the court had not made a final award of the purparts of the estate to the bidders, the master had not filed a supplemental report, and the *365 agreement recited by the latter was not complete because the guardian of the minor plaintiff had not joined therein. The court ordered the three bidders to file a stipulation of their inability to comply with their bids and consent to public sale of the designated property for the payment of costs, otherwise the rule to be made absolute. Exceptions to the order were dismissed.

The first question presented is the taxation of counsel fees and master’s fees as costs in a partition proceeding. In discussing this problem we are not concerned with the equitable principle that where professional services have been retained for the protection, enhancement or creation of a fund common to several parties, the court may direct that an allowance for these services be awarded to the party incurring the liability and the cost be distributed among the parties benefited: Weed’s Est., 163 Pa. 600; Hempstead v. Meadville Theological School, 286 Pa. 493; Wadlinger, Costs in Pennsylvania (1868), pp. 266-267; see Evans v. Diamond Alkali Co., 315 Pa. 335, 338.

Costs are of statutory origin: Hoedt v. Hoedt, 60 Pa. Superior Ct. 5, 6, and the Act of April 27, 1864, P. L. 641, Sec. 1, 1 gives authority for the allowance of counsel fees in partition. While counsel fees ordinarily are payable to counsel, in partition proceedings under the Act they belong to the plaintiff or petitioner; this was a right he did not have at common law, though in practice counsel never lose control of this important item. As the Act imposed a new legal burden on the parties interested in such proceedings and created a new right as to counsel fees, it has been strictly construed. 2 The wide discretion *366 exercised in the matter of costs by a court of equity, where, orders respecting them may be made as the justice of each case requires (Penna. Co. for Ins. etc., v. Phila. Nat. Bank, 195 Pa. 34), does not extend to the taxation of these costs. What is costs in partition proceedings is a substantive question, and the court’s discretion is limited.

The Act makes reasonable counsel fees part of the costs in these proceedings and the courts have followed the practice of allowing them since its passage. The fees contemplated were only such as would compensate counsel in a reasonable amount for services rendered in the actual partition and for the common benefit of the parties in interest: Grubbs's Appeal, 82 Pa. 23; Luzerne Assn. v. Peoples' Bank, 142 Pa. 121; Fidelity Ins., etc., Co.'s Appeal, 108 Pa. 339; Trickett on Partition, (1900), p. 224. When, however, partition is contested in good faith, or when the services rendered are adverse to the other parties, the petitioner cannot recover as costs counsel fees earned by his attorney in litigating his right to partition: Grubbs's Appeal, supra; Culp's Est., 26 W. N. C. 78; Luzerne Assn. v. Peoples' Bank, supra. No party other'than the plaintiff or petitioner is entitled to the allowance: Biles's Appeal, supra; Cooper’s Estate, supra; Campbell’s Estate, supra. He must proceed for them, his attorney cannot sue, have them taxed, or appeal from an order reducing them. 3 If plaintiff does not see fit to take advantage of this provision of the Act for his benefit, there is nothing which counsel can do other than to look to his client for compensation for services rendered: Pereyra’s Appeal, 126 Pa. 220. Counsel fees in partition are taxed by the court or under its direction, they are not fixed by the master: Snyder’s Appeal, 54 Pa. 67; Grubbs’s Appeal, supra; or *367 by agreement of the parties: Luzerne Assn. v. Peoples’ Bank, supra.

Under the rules relating to the taxing of counsel fees as costs in partition proceedings, the court below could not tax counsel fees as costs in the present case, for these reasons: First, these proceedings were adversary; the partition was bitterly contested from its inception and two appeals were made to this Court; all of the services performed by counsel were in behalf of their individual clients’ right to partition. While these proceedings have not been carried through to a final partition, that alone might not defeat the claim. Here, after an extended legal contest, the parties amicably settled their difference; the services during the contest could not have been for the benefit of all, though the institution of the suit and services directly connected therewith may have been. The second reason for denying counsel fees is that the petition to tax them as costs was made by counsel themselves, not by the plaintiffs. As stated, these fees go to the plaintiffs and counsel have no standing to prosecute a claim for them.

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Bluebook (online)
188 A. 328, 324 Pa. 362, 1936 Pa. LEXIS 525, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/novy-v-novy-pa-1936.