Court Opinion

ID: 5229082
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-06 16:52:01.072512+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:27:38.121200
License: Public Domain

Kellogg, J. (dissenting):
A careful consideration of the facts makes it clear that when the petitioner pays the $3,000 required by the order appealed from he and the bank will occupy respectively the position which their mutual understanding contemplated. In his peti*177tion he states that after taking the $19,000 allowed him by order of the court, he agreed with the bank that he was to assume the $3,218.18 expenses of the litigation with reference to the Dolson contract, and to refund to the bank $4,000, and that the balance, $11,781.82, was to constitute his legal fees. The letters and his report, which are the only real evidence of the contract submitted to us, show otherwise.
Petitioner was the largest “personal creditor” and a member of the depositors’ committee, and by its action he became a receiver. After the allowances were made and the property returned to the bank, he made a report to his committee, giving an account of his stewardship, in which, among other things, he states that the fees awarded are excessive; that the maximum legal fees are $15,250.48; that he will not accept any fees not strictly within the limit allowed by law, even though the court should approve of them, and that he proposes to expose and condemn the acceptance of any immoderate or illegal fees by any party to the receivership; that he should return to the bank $4,000 and treat $15,000 as his legal fees. He explains the litigation on the Dolson contract, and that he was paid personally in expenses about $3,000 in that litigation, and says: “ I might perhaps have included that in my expenses as receiver and secured paymentthereof from the funds of this trust, but I have believed that in proper justice they should be paid by the persons who improperly and illegally caused these expenses and not from the funds of the depositors or the bank whichl protected by the defeat of this contract. ” He then explains that he brought an action against his coreceiver to recover these expenses, and that, at the suggestion of the court, he had assigned the cause of action to the bank, but if the bank collected the amount he was to receive it. He says he had pledged himself to retain not one cent of the fees to himself, but that after paying his actual expenses he “ would return the balance to the committee to be used in defraying its expenses and the fees of your counsel, etc. * * * I would not now for any consideration accept for myself one cent of any fees that might be legally or officially awarded to me in this receivership.” That from his legal fees he will retain $6,000 to cover his personal expenses, of which *178$3,000 are the expenses of the Dolson appeal, $2,000 paid for press expenses and $1,000 for miscellaneous items; that he has paid to the depositors’ committee $5,000; that the remaining $4,000 he will retain for a few months as a reserve fund to be .used in case of necessity for any expenses which he or the committee may have to meet; that if said reserve fund is not necessarily used he will return a part to the bank, the other part to be donated to some Brooklyn institution as a memento of the work, and that the bank has agreed to pay all the expenses of the committee not covered by the payments from his fees.
He gave himself credit for doing a great work, entirely without compensation, and of carrying on the Dolson litigation at his own cost, without any expense to the bank or the committee. He mailed to the bank a copy of this report, referring to its contents as showing that he is to accept no excessive fees, and is to dispose of his legal fees in the manner indicated in the report. He suggests that an action might be brought by the stockholders to recover the illegal fees paid to the receivers and counsel, and that there may be some possible liability against himself and his coreceiver for signing checks for fees which may be held by a higher court to be illegal, and before turning over to the bank “ the excessive or illegal part of my [his] fees ” he asked it to relieve him by suitable agreement from such possible liability, and he reiterates the statement that he agrees out of his legal fees to pay all costs of the appeal in the Dolson matter, and closes: “You will, therefore, note that by this disposition of the allowance made to me by the court that I practically turn over all of said allowance to the depositors and the Bank, for the motives, purposes and reasons sufficiently stated in my report and needing no repetition here. ”
The bank replied to this letter, thanking him for his services and the position he had taken, and then states that he had given the officers of the bank to understand that he would engage to pay the bank $3,000 from the $4,000 held as a reserve fund, the balance, less whatever incidental expenses he might be called upon to pay, to be applied to some charitable purpose in Brooklyn, and calls his attention to the fact that he failed to confirm that agreement in his letter.
This letter is attached to his petition. He does not deny *179that the bank was ultimately to receive $3,000 of the reserve fund; we should, therefore, treat it as apart of the understanding". It is not unreasonable that he offered to pay, and that the bank expected to receive it. Whatever he paid to the depositors’ committee as a part of its expenses was virtually a payment for the benefit of the bank, which was to pay all of the committee’s expenses not met by the receiver’s fees. Any part of his fees which he agreed to pay to the depositors’ committee was properly payable to the bank after the bank had paid all the expenses of the committee. The committee’s expenses were evidently $21,700, of which the bank paid $16,700, and the petitioner, from his fees, $5,000. These expenses were not legal charges against the trust or the bank, and the bank should not have paid them, but it was anxious to resume business. While the petitioner had agreed with the bank and the committee to retain none of the fees himself except to reimburse him for the $6,000 expenses and the $1,000 for other expenses or a charity, the balance to be turned over to meet the expenses of the committee and to the bank, his services actually cost the bank $28,700, which it in fact paid in lieu of his legal fees of $12,000 allowed by the court. If he is permitted to retain the $3,000 in question it will increase the expense to the bank on his account to $31,700, or $19,700 in excess of the fees of one receiver.
We determined in People v. Brooklyn Bank (140 App. Div. 750) that the consent of the bank to the allowances and terms of the order by which it resumed business was given under moral if not legal duress. It is apparent that there was a verbal agreement covering all questions between the petitioner and the bank which is evidenced in part at least by the report and letters. Petitioner did not suggest that a- release be given which would permit him to retain excessive fees; he only asked to be protected from payments made. It is evident that he and the bank understood that he having returned the $4,000 to reduce his fees to" “ legal fees,” as he said, it was proper that he should be released from liability on account of what he had paid to others. In fact, under the agreement the petitioner was not to retain any fees, legal or illegal. The fixing of his fees was merely nominal, as they, less the expenses mentioned *180and the $1,000, were to be returned, to the bank. Neither party, therefore, could have contemplated that this release related to money retained as fees which both understood were legal and were designed ultimately for the bank or to reduce its payments to the depositors’ committee.
The release which the petitioner relies upon as a protection for retaining the excessive fees is not ambiguous. It recites the order of the court, and that, whereas, the receivers had made payments of the allowances, and, whereas, the order provided that on filing certain receipts and affidavits the petitioner should be forever discharged from any and all liability, and, whereas, and in the meantime and until the filing of such receipts and affidavits and his discharge as such receiver thereupon, he desires to be released from any claim or action which the bank may have against him by reason of having made payments provided by said order to the receivers and their counsel and others. According to its terms the release was intended only to take the place of the order of the court before the receipts and affidavits were filed.
Some months after the execution of the release the petitioner for his own purposes took proceedings to review the allowances to his counsel, the coreceiver and to himself, and succeeded in getting the order from which he now asks relief. He did not suggest to the court that he had made a private settlement with the bank as to his fees, and that so far as he was asking to have his fees reviewed the proceeding was a farce. The court on his motion determined that he must return $3,000.
The bank took no part in obtaining the order in question; it evidently had had all the publicity it desired, and was only anxious to get out of court and to carry on its banking business, with the hope that the public would forget its failures and all the facts connected therewith. It stands here asking that the proceeding instituted by the petitioner be treated as taken in good faith, and not for ulterior purposes. We must take the petitioner seriously and not assume that in asking the judgment of the court whether the amount awarded him was excessive he was using the court for his own purposes without intending-to be bound personally by its determination. He was the only party before the court questioning the fees of his *181coreceiver. If it had appeared that he had made a settlement for himself for $15,000 the court would have annulled the settlement, or have given his coreceiver the benefit of the same terms. This latter alternative would not have been agreeable to petitioner. There was no settlement or adjustment of fees between him and the bank. He stated what the legal fees were, and voluntarily accepted less, returning the balance. The bank accepted his statement and the money. There was no settlement of a disputed claim. After having procured an order that he is retaining illegal fees he cannot now relieve himself by using a release which he concealed from his coreceiver and the court. It is against public policy to allow a receiver to bargain with a party interested in the trust for the payment of fees not permitted by law, and if the release were capable of the construction urged it would be void as against public policy and without consideration. If a receiver has taken $7,000 more than his legal fees he cannot voluntarily return $4,000 and thus relieve himself of the obligation to return the other $3,000.
Clearly the release was not executed for the purpose now claimed for it; it was executed solely to protect him from the payments which he had made to others. In contemplation of law, when he drew the funds from the bank it was not a payment to himself. He is accountable for all the funds and may account for a part of. them by retaining his legal fees. The taking of money beyond his legal fees is not a payment which will be protected by the terms of the release. The bank took no proceedings to review the order; they were taken by him. He-cannot obtain a modification of the order, bring an injury upon himself and then ask to be relieved from that injury by a release which protects him from a proceeding taken by the bank. The bond does not purport to reheve him from the result of his own action.
It does not appear that he paid any expenses exceeding $1,000 which would properly be a charge upon the reserve fund. He could not against the wishes of the bank institute affirmative proceedings to review this order, which the bank had assented to, and charge the expense thereof upon the bank. His active duties were ended. AU that remained for him to do was to file *182the release and affidavit. No other action was contemplated by the order of the court or the agreement with the bank. The bank had a fixed interest in the reserve fund, and may well insist that the part of it in which it is interested should be applied only after the $1,000 was expended in paying expenses incurred but which had not been called to the attention of the receiver or the committee, or expenses coming upon them in ‘ ‘ case of necessity,” and the reasonable expenses in filing the receipts and the affidavit contemplated by the order. The bank and its stockholders were able to protect themselves, and the petitioner had no right to institute new proceedings at its expense. No case of necessity for other expenses is shown. There is, therefore, no reason or justice in the application.
The $3,000, upon any theory, is the property of the bank. If it represents excessive fees, the petitioner in law, and according to his contract and professions, cannot retain it. It cannot represent the expenses of the Dolson litigation because the petitioner has already retained that sum as a part of the $6,000 for his personal expenses. If it represent either legal or excessive fees, then under the agreement between the parties it is a part of a fund which was primarily to be used to pay the committee’s expenses, and the bank having paid-the committee, under the mutual understanding it belongs to the bank. The Dolson expenses were from the beginning treated by the petitioner as his personal matter. He agreed with the stockholders and the bank to pay them, and they are not properly chargeable against the trust, for under section 242 of the General Corporation Law (Consol. Laws, chap. 23; Laws of 1909, chap. 28), attorneys’ fees cannot be paid by a receiver until reported to and approved of by the Special Term. By not having taken that course the petitioner makes it plain that they were not to be paid by the estate but by himself. That has been his position from the beginning, and it is now too late to change it. If he pays the $3,000 there is still in his hands the $1,000 to meet the other necessary expenses and for the Brooklyn charity. The petition should be dismissed, with costs.
Decree modified so as to relieve Mr. Higgins of the repayment of the $3,000 which he has expended and for which the Brooklyn Bank has conceded its liability, without costs of this motion.