Court Opinion

ID: 3882356
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 09:13:25.907645+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:41:57.941181
License: Public Domain

The petition for rehearing questions the correctness of the opinion which has been filed upon the ground only that the answer put in issue the reasonableness of the allowance of attorney's fees, which issue, it is claimed, could only have been determined by the verdict of a jury. *Page 392 
As this presents a much vexed question constantly occurring, we propose to settle the law upon the subject once for all.
In this particular case, or rather cases, as there are four of them, the amounts due upon the several notes and the attorney's fees allowed were as follows:
Bank of Enoree v. John Yarborough
   et al _______________________________ $9,485.13   $360.00
Same v. C.D. Yarborough et al __________  1,998.30    100.00
Woodruff Oil  Fertilizer Co. v.
   John Yarborough et al. ______________  4,080.39    140.00
Same v. C.D. Yarborough et al. _________    648.24     64.84
                                                  __________ ________
                                                 $16,212.06   $664.82

Upon notes aggregating $16,212.06 there were allowed attorney's fees amounting to $664.82, although the notes called in each instance for 10 per cent. attorney's fees.
It has been held in numerous decisions that in cases in equity (foreclosure of mortgages, for instance), the Court will exercise its judgment in determining the reasonableness of a provision in a note for attorney's fees, and, regardless of whether the provision is for a definite percentage or not, will allow only such fees as are reasonable compensation for the services performed. Mathesonv. Rogers, 84 S.C. 458; 65 S.E., 1054; 19 Ann. Cas., 1066, where it is said:
"The true rule deducible from the weight of authority is that such contracts are subject to the control of a Court of equity, when the creditor invokes such jurisdiction to enforce his claim and the Court will enforce the contract where it is not clearly unreasonable and oppressive."
In Coley v. Coley, 94 S.C. 383; 77 S.E., 49, which was also a case of foreclosure of a mortgage, the Court said:
"A stipulation in a contract providing that the debtor shall pay a certain per cent. of the debt as attorney's fees *Page 393 
for collection or suit, will be enforced according to its terms, unless it appears to the Court that the charge is unconscionable; * * * but when it appears to the Court that the per cent. stipulated for would be an extortionate and unconscionable charge for the service rendered, the Court should, either at the instance of the debtor or of its own motion, reduce the charge to an amount which would be reasonable compensation for the services rendered by the attorney for the creditor."
The ground upon which the Court justifies its supervisory power over provisions for attorney's fees is thus expressed in Coley v. Coley, 94 S.C. 383; 77 S.E., 49:
"But when there is an appearance of extortion on the part of an attorney, jealousy for the fair name and usefulness of the profession, and duty to the public require that the Court should scrutinize the transaction and prevent any unconscionable advantage. * * * For a greater reason, the Court will relieve against excessive charges made by, or for the benefit of, attorneys who are officers of the Court, sustaining a relation of trust to the public."
Whether or not this supervisory power may be said to be derived from the equity powers of the Court, which seems to be intimated in the case of Matheson v. Rogers,supra, we think it is equally clear from the case of Coley v.Coley, supra, that it may be attributable to the jurisdiction of the Court over its officers, and in the interest of the profession, to see that an attorney "will not lower his profession by cheapness, nor promote his own interest by extortion," as well as to the safeguarding of the trust relation which an attorney bears to the public.
We think therefore that the power of supervision, in equity cases, is easily sustained by resort to the inexhaustible reservoir of that great Court, and in law cases to the wise enforcement of a just and enlightened public policy to maintain the highest standard of virtue in the officers *Page 394 
of the Court, particularly in view of their trust relation to the public; and that to whatever source the power may be attributed, it will be exercised with like efficacy in law as well as equity cases.
In the case of Newbold v. McCrory, 103 S.C. 299;87 S.E., 542, 1103, the plaintiff's husband, an attorney, her assignor, had made a contract with the defendant to secure the pardon or parol of a certain person convicted of a crime; the compensation agreed upon being $1,000.00, secured by notes and mortgages. In an action to foreclose the mortgage, the defendant set up several defenses, fraud, absence of consideration, against public policy, and that the fee was exorbitant and unconscionable. All of these defenses were ruled out except the last, that the fee agreed upon was exorbitant and unconscionable. This Court, overruling the Circuit Judge upon the point, held that it was and reduced it to $500.00. It will be noticed that while the point arose in an equitable action, the foreclosure of a mortgage, the case did not involve the validity or reasonableness of the provision for 10 per cent. attorney's fee in the note and mortgage, but the validity and reasonableness of the charge for services independent of the collection of the note and mortgage. It is clear, therefore, that the same question could have been raised if no mortgage had been taken and the action had been simply one at law upon the notes. This Court held, as matter of law, exercising its supervisory power, without testimony and without submission to a jury, that the fee was exorbitant and unconscionable; and we apprehend that there can be no difference of opinion as to the justice of that conclusion.
In Smith v. Phifer, 104 S.C. 396; 89 S.E., 323, the action was for the foreclosure of a mortgage securing three notes of $1,250 each, calling for 10 per cent. attorney's fees. The Court exercising its supervisory power held *Page 395 
that 5 per cent. was reasonable and reduced the judgment accordingly.
In 8 Cyc., 322, it is said:
"The amount of such fees is a question for the Court in the exercise of its equity powers, and is not a proper one for submission to a jury."
In the case of Yakima Bank v. Knipe (6 Wn., 348); 33 Pac., 834, it was held, quoting from the syllabus:
"In an action on a note providing for an attorney's fee, where no evidence is introduced by defendant, and none but the note itself by plaintiff, the construction of the note is for the Court, and defendant is not injured by the fact that the Court, instead of estimating the attorney's fees and instructing the jury to include it in their verdict, adds it to the verdict himself."
In Crutcher v. Sims, 184 Mo. App. 488;170 S.W., 480, the note called for a reasonable attorney's fee. The trial Judge, without evidence and without submitting the issue to the jury, fixed the amount of the fee. Upon appeal the Court held that in any case involving this question, evidence as to the amount of a fee is simply advisory to the Judge who is the ultimate arbiter of the issue; his action in the particular case being sustained.
The case of Connor v. Blodget, 18 Cal. App. 787;124 Pac., 733, is in striking parallel with the case at bar. The note called for "attorney's fees which may be incurred in the collection of the note."
The complaint alleged that $500.00 was a reasonable fee. The answer denied "that $500.00 is a reasonable fee to be allowed the plaintiff as attorney's fee in the collection of said note." A motion was made by the plaintiff for judgment without trial, which motion was granted and judgment entered for principal, interest, and $300.00 attorney's fee. On appeal the Court held that the defendant's denial in the form stated amounted to an admission *Page 396 
that any sum less than $500.00 was reasonable, and that the Court in fixing the fee at $300.00 found an amount within the limit admitted by the defendant to be reasonable. The Court further held:
"The Court was authorized, when the nature * * * of the services rendered by the attorney were made to appear from the papers and proceedings had, or by other evidence, to fix such an amount as would be a reasonable compensation for such services without hearing any expert evidence thereon."
It is said in the case of Spencer v. Collins, 156 Cal., 298;104 Pac., 320; 20 Ann. Cas., 49:
"The value of attorney's services is a matter with which a Judge must necessarily be familiar. When the Court is informed of the extent and nature of such services, its own experience furnishes it with every element necessary to fix their value."
In Fowler v. Bell (Tex.Civ.App.), 35 S.W. 822, it was held that, in an action tried by the Court on a note providing for a reasonable attorney's fee in case of suit, the Court may determine what is a reasonable fee, though no evidence thereof is introduced. The Court said:
"The note calls for reasonable attorney's fees, and the petition claims that 10 per cent. would be a reasonable sum. The case below was tried before Court, and it appears that no evidence was heard on the question what sum would be reasonable attorney's fees. The Court below, who had before it the parties, and all of the facts, could well determine what amount would be reasonable to allow as attorney's fees. He being a lawyer, his understanding as to what it would be reasonable to allow, when ascertained by the judgment, would be equally as effective as if the Judge, as a witness in the case, had testified that the reasonable fees were the sum he finally allowed. The testimony of other attorneys, if given, as to this item, would *Page 397 
not be binding and conclusive upon the Court, and it could have substituted its opinion in lieu of theirs, and have based its judgment upon it; hence the matter finally rested with the Court, and its judgment, if based upon the exercise of a reasonable discretion, ought not to be disturbed."
In Gallwey v. Castelhun, 35 Cal. App. 589;170 Pac., 657, it is held that the allowance of attorney's fees is within the discretion of the Court and its decision will not be disturbed in the absence of an abuse of that discretion.
In Futoransky v. Pope, 57 Okla. 755; 157 Pac., 905; L.R.A. 1916F, 548, it was held that where, in a suit upon a note providing for 10 per cent. attorney's fees, the Court did not submit the question of an attorney's fee to the jury, but directed them to find the amount of principal and interest, it was not error for the Court, in rendering judgment, to add 10 per cent. to the amount of the verdict as an attorney's fee.
Nor do we think that it makes a particle of difference whether the provision for attorney's fees is for a definite percentage or is expressed in indefinite terms as for a "reasonable attorney's fee." That is the ultimate issue for the Court to determine, and, if it has the power to determine that a given percentage is reasonable or that it is not and a lower percentage is reasonable, there does not appear any valid reason why the Court cannot determine in the case of a provision for a reasonable fee, what that fee should be.
It is true that in the case of Machine Co. v. Badham, 81 S.C. 63;61 S.E., 1031, the present Chief Justice declared:
"What is a reasonable * * * fee cannot be determined from an inspection of the note, but involves a question of fact which must be submitted to the jury."
But in that case the real issue of law was whether or not the provision in the note for an indefinite attorney's fee *Page 398 
rendered the note non-negotiable, in the commercial sense; and as to this question the Court, then composed of four Justices, was equally divided. So even if that declaration could be considered other than obiter dictum, it did not receive the sanction of the majority of the Court.
In the case of Bank v. Whitehead, 105 S.C. 100;89 S.E., 657, the action was at law upon a note for $1,000.00 calling for 10 per cent. attorney's fee. The Circuit Judge directed a verdict for the plaintiff for the principal sum and interest, but left it to the jury to say how much the attorney's fees should be. This Court held that, if the case had been one in equity, the allowance of a proper fee was a question to be determined by the Court, but that in a law case it was a fact in issue which the Court was bound to submit to a jury. This case is not in harmony with the decided cases in this State and upon this point is overruled. To allow a defendant sued upon a note, which he acknowledges, to contest as an issue of fact his own agreement as to fees and delay the holder indefinitely, is to permit the veriest trifling with justice.
There may arise cases, of course, where the right to recover any fees at all may depend upon certain issues of fact which involve that right. In law cases, such issues should be submitted to the jury; but in all cases, law and equity, in which there is no dispute as to the facts and the only issue is as to the reasonable amount of the fee, that becomes a question of law to be determined by the Court, either with or without expert testimony and with or without the assistance of the jury as the Court may desire; controlled, of course, by appeal to this Court.
   The petition is therefore dismissed. *Page 399