Young v. Fowler

200 S.W. 813, 132 Ark. 145, 1918 Ark. LEXIS 118
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 28, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 200 S.W. 813 (Young v. Fowler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Young v. Fowler, 200 S.W. 813, 132 Ark. 145, 1918 Ark. LEXIS 118 (Ark. 1918).

Opinion

McCULLOCH, C. J.

This is an action instituted in the chancery court of Benton County by appellee as a member of afirm of attorneys composed of appellee andW. N. Ivie, against appellant Young as trustee for the Bankers Trust Company of Dallas, Texas, to recover one-half of a fee alleged to have been earned by said firm of attorneys by services rendered in certain litigation prosecuted in that court and in the United States District Court for the Western District of Arkansas at Fort Smith, at the instance and for the benefit of appellant. A lien was asserted on property alleged to have been gained by appellant as a result of said litigation. In the original complaint Mr. Ivie was named as defendant by reason of the dissolution of the firm and his refusal to join in the •suit as plaintiff, but in an’ amended complaint subsequently filed by appellee, Mr.- Ivie was joined as plaintiff without his consent. As the suit was prosecuted without the consent, and apparently over the objection of Ivie, he must be and was by the lower court, treated as a defendant in the action. He testified :as a witness in the case, and his statement was that his'firm was not employed by appellant Young and was not entitled to claim a fee from Young. It is not claimed that there was an express contract as to the amount of the fee-, but appellee alleged in the complaint that the value of the service rendered by his firm for appellant Young, was the sum of $35,000, and that he was entitled to one-half of the fee.

Appellant denied that 'Fowler & Ivie were employed at all by him, or that they rendered any service for his benefit under circumstances from which a contract to pay a fee should be implied. The chancery court decided in favor of appellee as to the right to recover a fee and fixed the amount of his share at, $5,000, but held that he was not entitled to a lien on the property described in the complaint.

The Bank of Rogers, a banking corporation doing business at Rogers, Arkansas, became insolvent, and was taken over by the State Bank Commissioner, who placed a special deputy, Mr. Perry N. Clark, in charge of the assets of the bank to wind up its affairs, as authorized by statute. Among the assets of the defunct Bank of Rogers were certain second mortgage bonds of the Ozark Land & Lumber Company, another domestic corporation, of the par yalue of about $86,000, and also unsecured obligations of said corporation amounting to about $68,000. The Ozark Land & Lumber Company was operating in Benton County, Arkansas, and its principal assets consisted of 12,500 acres of timbered land and a short line railroad. It, too, became insolvent and was put into bankruptcy by its creditors. Mr. Clark, the Special Deputy State Bank Commissioner, being elected trustee for the estate of the bankrupt. In addition to the bonds of the Ozark Land & Lumber Company held by the Bank of Rogers, there was a prior bond issue of $150,000 held by certain parties in the East represented by a committee composed of Messrs. Johnson, Bird, Potter and Smith. These bonds were designated as “first mortgage bonds,” and when issued constituted a first lien on the assets of said corporation, a mortgage on the property of the corporation having been given to secure the same, but that priority was contested by other creditors on the ground that the holder of the bonds had accepted from the Ozark Land & Lumber Company a large amount of stock in the corporation as a bonus in the purchase of the bonds, and it was insisted by the State Bank Commissioner and other creditors of the Ozark Land & Lumber Company that the holders of the first mortgage bonds should be required to pay for the shares of stock received as a bonus before being allowed priority in their claim against the estate of the bankrupt.

On October 6, 1915, the State Bank Commissioner and Mr. Clark as trustee in bankruptcy.of the estate of the Ozark Land & Lumber Company, instituted an action in Benton Chancery Court against the holder of the said first mortgage bonds, alleging that said bondholders had accepted as a bonus from the Ozark Land & Lumber Company shares of stock of the par value of $150,000, which had never been paid fox-, axxd should be treated as a set-off against the bonds. The prayer of the complaint was that the second mortgage bonds held by the Bank of Rogers be declared a prior lien on the property of the Ozark Land & Lumber Company, which was mortgaged to secure the bonds, and that the lien be foreclosed. Duty & Duty, a firm of attorneys of Rogers, Arkansas, were the regular attorneys for the Bank Commissioner in the management of the affairs of the defunct bank, and they, together withFowler & Ivie, who were specially employed by the Bank Commissioner, instituted that suit. The holder of the first mortgage bonds appeared in that suit and moved to dismiss it, and on January 4, 1916, the court entered an order staying the proceedings in the suit until the bankrupt court should release the real estate from its jurisdiction. Nothing further was done in that case. The Bank Commissioner, with the approval of the Benton Chancery Court, paid to Fowler & Ivie the sum of $350, as fee for their services in the above mentioned suit. On January 22, 1916, appellant Young, as trustee for the Bankers Trust Company, of Dallas, Texas, purchased from the Bank Commissioner the undisposed of assets , of the Bank of Rogers, including the claims against the Ozark Land & Lumber Company, and the sale was duly confirmed by the Benton Chancery Court, under whose orders the affairs of the bank were being administered. That was the first appearance of appellant or of the Bankers Trust Company in the proceedings, and it has not been shown in the record why the trust, company or its trustee made the purchase, or that they were or had been otherwise interested in the affair.

On November 12, 1915, the holders of the first mortgage bonds of the Ozark Land & Lumber Company filed in the bankruptcy court, where the proceedings against that corporation were pending, their claim against the estate of the bankrupt on the bonds held by them, and asked that the claim be allowed as a preferred one. The trustee filed objections to the allowance of that claim, basing his objections on several grounds, one being the same set forth in the complaint of the Bank Commissioner and the trustee in the suit instituted in the Benton Chancery Court, to the effect that the claimants had accepted, as a bonus, shares of stock of the corporation equal in face value to the amount of the bonds. The trustee also presented a petition to the referee in bankruptcy asking for authority to employ an attorney to represent him in the matter of his objections to the allowance of the claim of the first mortgage bondholder, and stating that he had selected Fowler & Ivie as the attorneys to be so employed, who he stated in his petition had ‘ ‘ agreed to prosecute said objections to a determination, conditioned that if enough is not recovered and saved to the estate to warrant allowance and payment of attorney’s fees, that they receive no compensation for their services.” This petition, it is proved, was presented to the referee after consultation between him and appellee. The referee granted the petition and made an order authorizing the employment of Fowler & Ivie as attorneys to represent the trustee on the terms and conditions named in the petition.

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Bluebook (online)
200 S.W. 813, 132 Ark. 145, 1918 Ark. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-fowler-ark-1918.