Page v. Penrose

127 A. 748, 147 Md. 225, 1925 Md. LEXIS 97
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 15, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 127 A. 748 (Page v. Penrose) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Page v. Penrose, 127 A. 748, 147 Md. 225, 1925 Md. LEXIS 97 (Md. 1925).

Opinion

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

William Penrose is a. practicing lawyer of Baltimore City. In the course of his practice, extending over a number of years, he had considerable experience in the operation and management of banks and other financial institutions, and knows and is known to a number of persons connected with s.uch institutions in Baltimore City.

On October 14th, 1921, the Lafayette Bank of Baltimore, for reasons which need not be discussed here,.had fallen into serious financial difficulties, which threatened disaster un *227 less speedily remedied. 'In that extremity it employed Mr. Penrose as “special counsel” to the bank, and authorized him to borrow from time to' time on its behalf such sums “as may be needed.” He entered upon that employment, and between the 14th <jf October, 1920, and November 28th of the same year,'when a receiver for the bank was appointed, hé rendered services to- the- bank for which this Court, in Penrose v. Page, 145 Md. 1; said he was entitled to be compensated.' The lower court, in' the decree from which this appeal' is taken, 'fixed his compensation at $10,400, and' the question' before us is whether that allowance is reasonable and proper.

; ''That' question'is embarrassed by the nature of the services.' Regarded as a whole, technically speaking they cannot be regarded as legal, although some of them may have been legal dr quasi legal in their nature, nor can they be regarded as the’ services of a loan broker, although some of them partook of that character, too,' nor can they be said to be the ordinary services of a’financial expert, although the element of ex-' périencé in dealing with financial matters also entered into some of them. Mr. Ptenrose was employed as a lawyer, and it is possible that his training and experience as a lawyer "may have rendered his assistance more valuable to the bank, bu't it is difficult to point out any services rendered by him which' could not have'been rendered in ordinary course by á capable ánd experienced bank executive familiar with the needs, operation and management of banks. Indeed, there is'great force in this suggestion of the learned and careful judge who heard this case in the lower court. In speaking of the 'difficulty of separating the services into more or less conjectural elements and valuing each element, he .said: “This method óf computation does not seem to me to be as satisfactory as to consider his services as those of an executive officer called in temporarily to' do the administrative work of the president and board of directors, inasmuch as all of the serv^ ices rendered by him would be rendered under ordinary circumstances by the executive officers of the company without compensation'other than their salaries. The object of'emW *228 ploying him was to maintain the hank as a going concern, in doing which the president and board of directors had failed.” But the appellee was employed in the special capacity of a lawyer, for he was employed as “special counsel.” The bank, therefore, employed -a practicing lawyer to give up his practice ftar forty-two days and devote his entire time to its affairs, and while his services may not, and so- far as we can see were not, of a strictly -legal character, nevertheless, it is just that he should have been compensated for the services he gave at the same rate as he would have been had they been strictly legal in character. At the same time, because of the nature of the work he was to do and because it was uot such work as ordinarily required' the services of a lawyer, it must have been contemplated both by him and the hank that his employment as a lawyer covered not only such legal services as might be required, but also such services., as a hank executive might be required and expected to give, and that the compensation for his services as a lawyer would also cover such executive services as he might be called upon to render in an effort to- save the bank from failure. In fixing the compensation tibe lower court divided the services into three classes — brokerage, legal and executive. The only service which could reasonably he regarded as legal was the collection of some overdrafts, but as that service was -such as would ordinarily be rendered by any bank officer in the ordinary course of his duties, in our -opinion it fell within the scope of his general employment, and no allowance should have been made for it.

In the.decree appealed from the appellee was allowed one hundred dollars a day for his services under his general employment as “special counsel.” We are not prepared for several reasons to say that allowance was excessive. First, because the chancellor was familiar with the compensation for professional services allowed to lawyers practicing in his court, and in the absence of definite evidence to the contrary weight should be given his opinion; second, because it was supported by the testimony of the only witnesses who testified *229 on the subject; and third, because the services, even though unproductive, were substantial, arduous and between the dates referred to above occupied all the appellee’s time.

TVe cannot agree, however, with the value placed upon the appellee’s services as a loan broker. He secured on behalf of tlie Lafayette Bank loans, from different banks aggregating $149,000. That the appellee was entitled to compensation for those sendees in addition to the allowance made him for executive services was decided in Penrose v. Page, surpo'a, and the only question open is what that compensation should be.

The loans appear to have been for short terms, and to have been amply secured by collateral, and there is no apparent reason why with the same collateral they could not have been readily secured by any banker from any institution having the money to lend. There is some testimony, vague and unsatisfactory in quality, that Mr. Penrose guaranteed some of these loans, but even if he did, the risk he assumed was negligible because the loans were amply covered by collateral security. That he did render services in securing these loans for which he should be paid is undeniable, but in valuing those services regard must be had to the circumstances to which we have referred. The impression sought to be conveyed by the appellee’s testimony, that the loans were secured largely through the personal appeal of Mr. Penrose, and because of his standing and responsibility, is not borne out by the facts. One loan of fifty-two thousand dollars, part of the aggregate of $149,000, for instance, was secured by collateral aggregating approximately $130,000, and when the lender called the loan, Mr. George W. P'age, then the receiver of the bank, immediately arranged to borrow $50,000 on the same collateral and with no other security from the Union Trust Company. Considering that transaction, we cannot believe that the loan of $52,000 could not have been secured in Baltimore on that collateral without the personal undertaking of Mr. Penrose to secure its payment.

Three witnesses testified to what in their opinion was. a reasonable charge for the services rendered by Mr. Penrose' *230 in obtaining these loans. Two of them were members of the Baltimore Bar, of standing aud experience, and one the vice-president of the National Bank of Baltimore.

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Bluebook (online)
127 A. 748, 147 Md. 225, 1925 Md. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/page-v-penrose-md-1925.