Powell v. Davis
Powell v. Davis
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court,
By a decree, in a partition proceeding, certain lands of the estate of Van C. Davis, deceased, were ordered
Section 1866, Hemingway’s Code, section 2185, Code of 1906, provides that commissioners making sales under a decree shall he allowed the same fees as are allowed sheriffs under excution. Section 1857, Hemingway’s Code, section 2176, Code of 1906, providing fees for sheriffs, reads:
“On all money made by virtue of any decree, execution, attachment, or other process, the following commissions : to wit: On all sums over two hundred dollars, . . . one per centum.”
The appellees, co-owners, rely upon two propositions to sustain their case: First, that the commissioner could only retain commissions “on all money made by virtue of any decree,” as allowed sheriffs under the statute referred <to, and that two thousand, five hundred dollars cash' .paid by the purchaser at the sale in this case was the only “money made by virtue of the decree,” and that the amount of commission is fixed by the' amount of cash, or “money” coming into the hands of the commissioner by virtue of the sale; second, that the decree ordering the sale in this case provided that the purchaser might pay all cash including the amount of the mortgage indebtedness, or he might assume the mortgage indebtedness and pay the difference in cash at the sale, and this alternative was allowed the purchaser, and that the purchaser elected to assume the mortgage indebtedness and pay two thousand, five hundred dollars, the difference, in cash to the commissioner, and therefore, as there was no realization of seven thousand, six hundred dollars by the commissioner in the sale, but two thousand, five hundred dollars being the amount in fact realized by the commissioner, the ■commission on this latter amount only is allowable.
The appellant, Commissioner Powell, contends that the sale to the purchaser was made at a price and hid of
Counsel for appellant cites the case of Wynne v. Railroad Co., 45 Miss., 569, in support of his position, and we are inclined to agree with counsel for appellant that the rule announced in that case sustains his contention, in that, it is not always necessary, in legal contempla^ tion, that the actual cash money be physically placed in the hands of the commissioner by the purchaser at such sales before the commissioner is entitled to his commission on the amount for which the land was sold; because it often occurs that no actual cash is paid into the hands of the commissioner at such sales, yet he would be entitled to his commission on the amount realized by the sale. And so the statute,, providing that a commission shall be allowed “on all money made” does not limit the compensation of the commissioner to his per centum commission on the actual money paid into his hands, but the commission is allowable upon the amount realized, “or money made,” by and under the sale of the particular property decreed to be sold. We think the Wynne v. Railroad Case, supra, goes to the extent we have indicated, and, if the case before us rested solely upon the proposition that only cash money coming into the hands of the commissioner at the sale is to measure the commission allowable to the commissioner, the appellant would be entitled to a reversal. But the other contention made by the appellees, that the five thousand, one hundred dollars, due the mortgagee bank, being assumed by the purchaser according to the decree, was no part of the amount realized by the commissioner at the sale, is, in our judgment, sound and must be maintained here.
The fees of a commissioner for selling lands under a decree, as here, are to be fixed upon the basis of a
Plausible arguments are made and apt illustrations given by counsel with reference to the working of this rule when certain cases may arise thereunder. For instance, counsel for appellant, hy illustration, claims that in a sale in this case, if the property only brought five thousand, two hundred dollars, the commissioner would receive practically nothing for his services for making the sale, and that this would be unjust in view of the responsibility and amount of work necessary to be done on the part of the commissioner. We think that such a case might arise where the compensation of the commissioner would not he adequate for his services,- hut this is always a chance to. be taken where the measure of compensation is fixed upon a contingent basis. But the rule contended for by appellant would also work great injury to the co-owners in a case where they were the owners of a small interest in property which was heavily incumbered with prior mortgages. If the commissioner in such case were allowed his commission on the total amount of all the mortgage indebtedness, and the amount realized by. the commissioner on the sale of their interest in the property was small, then the commissions on the total indebtedness against the property would consume the entire amount realized by the sale of the interest of the co-owners, and they would receive nothing for their interest in the land, because the mortgage creditors could not be held to pay any part of the commission as they were not parties to the proceedings.
The decree of the lower court is affirmed.
.Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Powell, Clerk v. Davis
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Judicial' Sales. Commissioner. Fees. Money made. The Code of 1906, section 2185-2176 (Hemingway’s Code, sections 1866-1857), providing that commissioners making sales under a decree shall he allowed the same fees as sheriffs under execution and that sheriffs shall he allowed a fee “on all money-made” does not limit the compensation of the commissioner to his per centum. commission on the actual money paid into his hands, hut the commission is allowable upon the amount realized or “money made” by and under the sale of the particular property decreed to he sold. 2. Paktitioit. Commissioner’s fees. Mortgagees. Property sold. Where under a decree property was ordered sold subject to a mortgage the' mortgagee not being a party to the suit, and only the interest of the parties to the suit was ordered to be sold, in such case the commissioner making the sale was entitled to commission only on the difference between the entire sale price and the amount of the mortgage on the property.