In re Hulbert
In re Hulbert
Opinion of the Court
On October 28., 1880, Milan Hulbert and William A. Hulbert, the appellants, who were doing business as a firm in the city of New York, having become financially embarrassed, made a general assignment for the benefit of their creditors to the respondent, Adrian Van Sinderin. The assignee took formal possession of the assigned property, which consisted of merchandise and book accounts. The property remained in the store of the assignors in charge of their former book-keeper, who was selected by the assignee .as his representative. The assignors and the person thus placed in charge sold goods and made collections to the amount of $45,374.53, which sum was paid to and received by the assignee.
Thereafter, before the close of January, 1881, all the creditors of the assignors executed a composition deed,
The general term of the common pleas confirmed the decision of the referee as to these items, except as to the counsel fee, upon the accounting, and referred that back to the referee for a further hearing as to the value of the services of the counsel upon the accounting. From the decision of the general term the assignors have brought this appeal, and here complain mainly of the amount allowed for commissions. ' They claim that the commissions should have been computed only on the sum of money which came into the hands of the assignee, while he claims that his commissions were properly computed upon the value of all the property which was assigned to him.
Section 26 .of the General Assignment Act of 1877, as amended by section 7 of chapter 318 of the Laws of 1878, provides that “the assignee shall receive for his services a commission of five per centum on the whole sum which will have come into his hands,” and the matter now to be decided is what was meant by this
It may be said that this construction will deprive the assignee of any compensation in case a composition is made by the assignor before the assignee has converted any of the assigned property into cash. Such cases, however, will not be common, and the assignee can always protect himself by an agreement with the assignor before he accepts the assignment, as to the amount of his compensation in case of a composition. Such an agreement would be valid as between the as
We do not intend by this construction to alter or affect the rules which have been laid down for computing the fees or commissions of sheriffs, executors, administrators and trustees. ' A sheriff is not a volunteer. He discharges a duty imposed upon him by law, and his fees are not large ; and the commissions of executors and trustees are not large, and would not be excessive in most cases, if computed upon the whole property which has come into their hands, and which in the end they may distribute or dispose of as money. Our construction of the act now under consideration is confined to the language used, and the consideration of what we conceive to have been the purpose of the legislature.
Much reliance is placed by the assignee upon the case of Bunch, 12 Wend. 280. In that case an attachment was issued at the instance of one Mitchell against Bunch, a non-resident debtor, and trustees were appointed, and the trustees caused Bunch to be brought before the officer who issued the warrant of attachment; and while the proceeding was pending, Bunch compromised with Mitchell and gave him a bill of exchange for upwards of $19,000, in consideration whereof Mitchell gave him a general release and discharge from all liability. In that case the statute provided that the
Our recent decision in the matter of the Woven' Tape Skirt Co. (85 N. Y. 506), furnishes some support to the conclusion we have reached.
Commissions have sometimes been allowed on the whole amount of property which has come into the hands of a trustee, as an equitable mode of adjusting his compensation; but constructive commissions, that is, commissions on property not converted into cash, may, upon an equitable accounting, be refused to a trustee, where their allowance would be inequitable and unjust. Here the commissions claimed are so disproportionate to the value of the services rendered that their allowance cannot be justified upon any principles of equity or justice. The rule which gives the assignee his commissions upon the money which actually came into his hands will, in this case, measure the compensation more accurately and justly than any other which could be adopted.
As to the charge of $2,000 for'services of counsel upon the accounting, where there was no dispute, contest or litigation, we think the court below did well to refer that item back for further investigation.
Our conclusion therefore is, that the judgment of the court below should be modified by reducing the commissions allowed to $2,268.72, five per cent, on the money actually received, and as thus modified, affirmed without costs in this court to either party.
All the judges concurred except Tract, J., absent.
Reference
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