Case ID: f_35/html/0603-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "Benedict, J.", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

Robinson et al. v. Fifteen Thousand Five Hundred and Sixteen Bags of Sugar.
    
    
      (District Court, E. D. New York.
    
    May 12, 1888.)
    Admiralty—Costs—Marshal’s Fees—Compromise oe Claim—Basis of Computation.
    The sum paid a libelant in settlement of bis claim, and not the amount claimed in the libel, is 1he basis upon which the marshal’s commissions are to be determined, under section 829, Rev. St.
    In Admiralty. Appeal from clerk’s taxation of costs.
    
      E. B. Corners, for libelant.
    
      Martin & Smith, for claimant.
    
      Charles M. Stafford, U. S. Marshal, in person.
    
      
       Reported by Edward Gt. Benedict, Esq., of the New York bar.
    
   Benedict, J.

This caso comes before the court on an appeal from the clerk’s taxation of the marshal’s fees. The claim set forth in the libel amounted to $1,959.98. After the service of the process by the marshal, and before trial, the case was compromised by the parties by the payment to the libelant of $1,200. Thereupon the marshal presented tor taxation his bill of costs, in which he claimed commission on $500 at 1 per cent., and commission on $1,459.98 at 1 per cent. The claimants do not object to the commission of 1 per cent, on the first $500, but claim that the 1 per cent, commission should be on $700, instead of $1,459.98. The clerk allowed a commission of 1 per cent, on $500. and a per cent, on $700. The marshal appealed.

The question lo be decided is whether the marshal is entitled to calculate his commission on the amount paid by way of compromiso of the claim, or the amount sot forth in the libel as the libelant’s claim. The words of the statute are:

“ When the debt or claim in admiralty is settled by the parties without the sale of the property, the marshal shall be entitled to a commission of one percent. on the first five hundred dollars of the claim or decree, and one-half of one per cent, on the excess of any sum thereof over five hundred dollars.”

In my opinion, where the amount, due the libelant is not fixed by decree, but agreed on by compromise, the amount paid by way of compromiso to settle the claim is to be considered the amount of the claim within the moaning of this statute. Such has always been the interpretation of the statute, so far as I know, in this court, and it seems in harmony with the decisions upon the subject. See The, Ciintonia, 11 Fed. Rep. 740; The, City of Washington, 13 Blatchf. 410; The Bussia, 3 Bon. 4/1. These cases are not precisely similar to this case, but it will, 1 think, lie in harmony with the principle of these cases to hold that, when a libelant agrees to accept a certain sum of money in settlement of his demand, that sum becomes his claim within the meaning of the statute. Of course the libel could at any time be amended by reducing the demand to the amoun.t agreed to he accepted as the libelant’s claim, in which case there would be no ground to contend that the amount paid was not the amount of the claim. The clerk’s taxation is affirmed.