Trustees v. Greenough

105 U.S. 527, 26 L. Ed. 1157, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2153
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 18, 1882
Docket601
StatusPublished
Cited by1,022 cases

This text of 105 U.S. 527 (Trustees v. Greenough) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trustees v. Greenough, 105 U.S. 527, 26 L. Ed. 1157, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2153 (1882).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Bradley

delivered the opinion of the court.'

‘’The question in this case is - one of cost's, expenses, and allowances awarded to- the complainant below out of a trust fund under the control of the court. Ordinarily a decree will not be reviewed by this court on a question of costs merely in a suit in equity, although the court has entire control of the matter of costs, as well as the mérits, when it' has possession of. [528]*528the cause on appeal from the final decree. But it was held by Lord Cottenham, in Angell v. Davis (4 Myl. & Craig, 360), that Vhen the case is not one of personal costs, in which the co’urt has ordered one party to pay them, but a case in which the court has directed them to be paid out of a particular fund, an appeal liesjm. the part of those, interested in the fund. Lord Cottenham, in deed,” suggested other cases in which an appeal might lie from a decree for costs, as where the costs are, part of the specific relief prayed; and where the whole of the facts .distinctly appear upon the face of the proceedings themselves, so that it is not necessary, in determining the question, to enter into any investigation pf the merits. But these suggestions have not met with subsequent approval; and in the case of Taylor v. Dowlen (Law Rep. 4 Ch. App. 697), the court’ declared that they were not disposed to extend the case of Angell v. Davis; and dismissed an appeal brought .by parties ordered to pay costs, which they claimed should be payable out of a fund.

But.these discussions in the English courts arose under .a system in which appeal's from interlocutory orders are allowed. We can only entertain an appeal from a final decree; and supposing the objection to..the appeal on the ground of its being from a decree for costs only is untenable, as we think it is, then arises’ another question, whether the orders appealed from amount to a final decree.

The principal suit was commenced in 1870, by a bill filed by Francis Vosé, a large_h older of-bonds of the Florida Railroad Company, op behalf of-himself arid the other... .bondholders, against Harrison. Reed and Others, trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund' of Florida, and against the former mem: . bers of the same board, and against the board itself as a corporation, and sundry other corporations alleged to be in complicity -with them. That fund consisted of ten or eleven million acres of lands belonging to the State, including certain proceeds of the sale of some of them, and was pledged- for the payment of . the interest accruing on the bonds and instalments of the sinking fpnd for meeting the principal, which were largely in ar-\ rear. The charge of . the bill is to the effect that the trustees were wasting and destroying the fund by selling at nominal. [529]*529prices the lands' by the hundred thousand and even million acres, and failed and .refused to provide for the payment of interest or sinking fund on the bonds. . The • bill prayed that the fraudulent conveyances be set aside, and the trustees en-. joined from selling more lands; and that a, receiver be appointed to take care of the fund. .

The litigation was carried on with great vigor and at much expense, and in fact 'a large amount' of the trust fund was §ecured and saved; the management of the fund was taken out of the hands, of the. trustees; agents were appointed by the court to make sales of the. land,'and made a large number of sales; a considerable amount of money was realized, and .dividends have been made amongst the bendholders, most of whom'came ill and took the benefit of tbe litigation. Yose, the complainant, bore the whole burden of this litigation, and advanced most of the expenses which were necessary for the purpose of rendering it effective and successful. In 1875 he filed a petition, setting forth these advances and the efforts, made by him, and-prayed an allowance out of the fund for his... expenses and.jsetvices. In December, 1876, an order was made by the court referring it to a master to ascertain : 1.-What and by whom the necessary expenditures have been incurred in bringing the moneys already received into court. 2, What necessary expenditures have been made, and by whom, in protecting the landed and sinking fund from which this money has been and will be realized. 3. What personal services have been rendered, and by whom, in said work, and the value thereof. 4. What amount of same have been charged to Francis Yose by the receiver, instead of being paid out of the common fund in his hands.

Vose presented his account and vouchers before the master,., and testimony was taken on the subject. In 1877 the master made a report, in which, amongst other things, he stated as follows: —

“First, After consideration of the proofs as submitted to me,yI find and report that the moneys which have already been received, whether upon account of the internal improvement fund or of the sinking fund, have been brought, into court at the instance and the suit and by the sole efforts of [530]*530Francis Vose, the petitioner, through himself, his solicitors and his agents, and by the instrumentality more directly and especially of his'proceeding in equity against the Trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund et al., as they appear in the records which are made-evidence in this case.”

The master further. reported a statement of expenditures made by Vose in the cause* and declared that they were necessary, expenditures, being for fees of solicitors and counsel, costs of court, and sundry small incidental items for copying records and the.like, the whole amounting to $34,192.62. He also stated and allowed sundry fees paid in maintaining other suits in New York, and on appeal to this court, attorneys’ fees for resisting fraudulent .coupons, and expenses paid to attorneys and agents to investigate fraudulent grants of the trust lands, amounting in all to $19,745.68. He also reported in favor of an '■ allowance to Vose for his personal services and expenditures, as follows: —

“I.further find and report-that peculiar and great personal services have been rendered by the petitioner, Francis Vose, in the work of protecting the internal improvement and the sinking funds;. those services extending over a period of more than eleven. years. By the instrumentality of the suits already mentioned-'as having been instituted by him, by the agencies he employed and sustained, and by his own vigilance and personal efforts he has saved from spoliation and subjected to the decrees of this court a vast domain of over ten millions of acres of land; and has'brought into this court large sums of money, which, from time to time, have been distributed by its orders.

“ I consider and report that the chai’ge embraced in his itemized account, and numbered forty-two (42), for $25,000 principal, and $9,625-interest,;is reasonable and just.

“ I also find that the charge in his itemized account, numbered forty-one (41), for personal expenditures of $15,003.35, is reasonable' and just. Total $40,003.35.”

The first of these itéms consisted of an allowance of $2,500 a year for ten years of personal services; the second was for railroad fares and hotel bills paid by the complainant.

' The proceedings before the.master -were opposed; but, on a hearing upon the report and the evidence submitted therewith, [531]*531the court confirmed it.

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Bluebook (online)
105 U.S. 527, 26 L. Ed. 1157, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trustees-v-greenough-scotus-1882.