Taylor v. Denney

84 A. 369, 118 Md. 124
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 10, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 84 A. 369 (Taylor v. Denney) 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
Taylor v. Denney, 84 A. 369, 118 Md. 124 (Md. 1912).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

. This appeal, was taken from, a- decretal order of the Circuit Court of Baltimore City overruling exceptions to the allowance of certain commissions and a counsel fee and ratifying the auditor’s account.

First: The exceptions to the commissions were based on the fact that the auditor allowed them on the proceeds of' what he treated as four separate sales, instead of on the aggregate amount reported for distribution. The rule of the lower Court is not in the record, but as we understand it to be conceded that, it is properly stated in the briefs, and no objection was made to its absence from the record, we will consider the case as if the rule was regularly before us. It provides that “On sales under decrees or orders of the Court, the following allowances will be made to trustees and receivers,” and then follow the amounts to be allowed on the first $300, and on the second $300, and, etc., ranging from nine per centum on the first to three and a half per centum on the tenth $300, making one hundred and sixty-five dollars on the first $3,000.00. It then allows three per centum on the proceeds of sales above $3,000.00, and up to $25;000.00, two per centum on those above $25,000.00, and up to $50,000.00, and provides that on the proceeds of sale in excess of the last named sum the commission shall be in the discretion of the Court.

The total proceeds» of sales reported amounted to $30,-691.25,- but there were two reports filed — one as of January 28, 1911, which contained two items, $3,425.75 and $9,-750.50, and the other of February 18th, 1911, which also *127 contained two items, $2,895.00 and $14,620.00. The last named sum embraced the proceeds of sales of ground rents and other real estate, while the other three were of sales of personal property. The reports are not in the record, but the auditor testified to those facts. In answer to the question how he arrived at the commissions allowed, he said: “I can say first in explanation that when the papers were referred to me to state an account nothing was said to me by the trustees about commissions at all, and I, therefore, computed them in accordance with equity rule 24 as followed by the auditors in practice. I treated first the sales of the personal property, stocks and bonds, as separate sales when made separately.” When asked by the Court, “You treated each occurring sale as a separate accummulation of sales?” he replied, “As a separate sale when made separately.” He also stated that the sales of personalty were made at the Stock Exchange and the sales of the real estate were made at public auction.

In the absence of the reports and more definite evidence than we have, it is difficult to ascertain from- the record whether the sales mentioned in the respective reports were made the same day, ór when they were made with reference to each other, but according to the auditor they were made separately, and he treated them as separate sales — that is to say, the sales which produced the four sums above named. The only reported case in this State on the question, we have found, is Goodburn v. Stevens, 1 Md. Ch. 420, where the Chancellor held that “When several sales were made at different times, the commissions of the trustee should be calculated upon each sale separately, and the sales are not to be treated as if made at one time.” That case in referred to in a note in Miller s Eqmty Procedure, 663, where, after making the above quotation, the author adds: “To the same effect see Myers v. Myers, Circuit Court of Baltimore City, Daily Record, January 24th, 1891.” The rule of the High Court of Chancery on the subject was substantially the same' at the time of the decision in Goodburn v. Stevens, as will be *128 seen by reference to Alexander's Chancery Practice, 147 and 370. Inasmuch as the Court’s attention was especially called to the allowance made by the auditor and the Court overruled the exceptions, it is evident that the allowance was in accordance with the construction placed on the rule by that Court, and the auditor’s testimony shows it was in accordance with the practice followed by the auditors of that Court.

It would be difficult to announce a general rule on the subject applicable to all cases, for it must depend largely on circumstances. The rule clearly does not mean that the auditor must in all cases, where there has been more than one sale made under one decree, fix the commission as if there had only been one sale, regardless of when the sales were made, or of the reasons for selling at separate times. A trustee might, for example, sell properties at one sale, the proceeds of which amounted to twenty-five thousand dollars, and then by reason of his failure to get any or adequate bids be required to withdraw the rest of the property and sometime afterwards readvertise and sell that. He might have as much, or more, trouble at the second sale than he did at the first, and yet if, in fixing the commission, the proceeds of the second sale must be treated as simply added to those of the first, he might not be properly compensated for his trouble at the second. There are many continuing trusts in which such a rule would work a hardship on the trustee. Then when a trustee has both real and personal property to sell and he sells the real property at public auction at the Beal Estate Exchange in Baltimore, or elsewhere, in accordance with the established practice in such cases, and then sells stock and bonds at the stock exchange through a broker, there may be cases in which the Court would be justified in treating them as separate sales, although made the same day and reported to the Court in the same reported sales. On the other hand, a trustee should not be permitted to make sales at different times and receive full commissions on each unless there is a valid reason for making them separately. It might be possible for a trustee to burden an estate for his *129 own benefit if the privilege of selling separately is too greatly extended. Snob questions must, however, be left largely to the discretion of the lower Court having jurisdiction over the trust — in the absence of rules which leave it no discretion.

AVe have thought it proper to say thus much on the subject, but this ease seems to us to be free from difficulty. The rule of the Circuit Court of Baltimore City above referred to, after fixing the rates of commissions to be allowed on sales under orders or decrees, has the following provision in it: “The above allowances are subject to be increased in cases of postponement at the request of the defendant, or of extraordinary difficulty or trouble, or from other circumstances, and to be lessened in cases of negligence or other default of the trustee or receiver, at the discretion of the Court.” If the circumstances surrounding these sales had been more fully presented by the record we would not have been justified in disturbing the action of the lower Court, unless there had been shown a clear abuse of the discretion vested in it, and in the absence from the record of those circumstances we must assume that the Court acted properly.

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Bluebook (online)
84 A. 369, 118 Md. 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-denney-md-1912.