Doughty v. West, Bradley & Cary Manuf'g Co.

WOODRUFF, Circuit Judge.

(1.) The act of February 20, 1853 (10 Stat. 101), declares, that the fees or compensation prescribed therein shall be taxed and allowed to attorneys, solicitors and proctors in the district and circuit courts, United States district attorneys, clerks, marshals, witnesses, jurors, commissioners and printers, and that no other compensation shall be taxed and allowed. The act then allows to attorneys, solicitors and proctors, among other fees, as follows: “In a trial, before a jury, in civil or criminal causes, or before referees, or on a final hearing in equity or admiralty, a docket fee of twenty dollars.” No other provision of the act can be claimed to warrant the charge of docket fees in the bill of costs taxed herein. It will be noticed, that, in the language quoted, there is no mention of any hearing before a master of this court in equity, for any purpose, and, I think, for the reason, that there is no practice, in equity, sending a case to a master for a final hearing. And if, within the fair intent of the statute, a matter referred to a master might be said to be heard before him as a “referee,” using that term in its broadest sense, and not as meaning a person technically so called, in distinction from a recognized officer of the court, still, the hearing before him on such a reference is neither a trial, nor a final hearing, within the meaning of the act. “Trial” and “final hearing” have well-known definite meanings in the law. and they are used in this statute in that weil-Known sense. “Trial” is used to describe the process of determining the issues in an action at law; and “final hearing,” the submission of the case, for a determination thereof, upon the pleadings, or pleadings and proofs, or otherwise, so that the case may be finally disposed of. No. such trial or final hearing was had before the master, in this case, whether he be regarded as master, or, in a general sense, as a referee. The proofs taken before him, and the report he was required to make, were for a provisional and interlocutory purpose, namely, to dispose of a motion for an injunction, pendente lite. This was neither a trial nor a final hearing. The two sums taxed as docket fees should, therefore, have been disallowed, and must be struck out.

(2.) It is. a little remarkable, that while the statute often speaks of causes in equity, and prescribes the fees of solicitors, marshals and clerks, for services in suits in equity, the statute nowhere mentions fees of masters. But, in prescribing the fees of commissioners, it does allow (page 1071 “for attending to a reference, in a litigated matter, in a civil «tuse at law, in equity or in admiralty, in pursuance *973of an order of court, three dollars per day.” The supreme court, by rule SS of the rules in equity, have assumed to authorize the circuit courts, or perhaps to declare the general power of the circuit courts, in equity, to appoint standing masters in chancery in their respective districts; and have provided, that ‘‘the compensation to be allowed to every master in chancery, for his services in any particular case, shall be fixed by the circuit court in its discretion, having regard to till the circumstances thereof.” The clerk has no power, under this rule, to fix the compensation to be allowed; and his taxation was, therefore, inoperative. This appeal may, however, be regarded as an application to the court to fix Hie compensation to be taxed, and it was substantially so treated by the counsel who appeared and argued the question. It is not obvious that, in like eases, the fees -allowed to a master for attending to a reference, in a litigated matter, should be greater than the fees to which a commissioner attending to such a reference is entitled by statute. The question, however, under the rule of the supreme court, is what, in the discretion of the court, ought to be allowed to the master, in this case. Obviously. this question can be best answered, by ascertaining, if possible, what is a proper compensation to be in general allowed—what,.in ordinary cases, of no peculiar or special difficulty, and involving no extraordinary labor. The importance of some general rule for the government of ordinary cases, at least, is not ■ only apparent, but it has been the ground of specific legislation as to nearly all the fees which are permitted to be taxed; and, although the rule of the supreme court has left these particular fees in the discretion of the court, it is, nevertheless, important, even here, that some general rule should govern the subject. The rule of this court in relation to references in admiralty, under the forty-fourth rule of the supreme court in admiralty. was adopted to fix the fees to be allowed to commissioners under that rule, and the consideration that some, general rule or rate of fees was important, may be assumed to have largely influenced the court in the matter, lest abuses should arise out of an unsettled and indefinite appeal to discretion. Indeed, it would not be doing great violence to the action of this court last referred to, if I were to say, that, although this court could not, by rule, deprive a party of his right to appeal to the discretion of the court secured to him by the rule of the supreme court, still, this court can determine what is a proper compensation in ordinary cases, and did so, on the 28th of May, 1859. when the rule of this court was adopted. 4 Blatchf. 515 [Append. Fed. Cas.]. It, therefore, appears, that, by statute, the fees of commissioners, on a litigated reference, in a civil cause, are three dollars a day; and that their fees on a reference in admiralty, under the 44th of the rules of the supreme court, were fixed, in 1S59. by rule of the circuit court, at the rates allowed by the court of chancerj', and established in 1844, upon the general principle, that the services rendered by officers of this court should be compensated at the rates allowed for similar services in the courts of the state. In general, this will be found just and reasonable, though, since 1859, the changes in the relative value of money and the means of subsistence have been so great, that the specific rates then deemed reasonable may now be inadequate, in some cases. There are how no masters in chancery, under the state laws. The services formerly performed by them are now ren-, dered by referees appointed for each case; and I think it quite reasonable that masters of this court should be allowed, as the general rule, the compensation allowed by the state law to such referees, three dollars per day, or at the rate fixed for services under the above named 44th rule, where, at that rate, the services would amount to more than three dollars per day. But cases of peculiar importance and difficulty sometimes come before a master or a referee, in which that compensation would be inadequate. The state law rec-ocgnizes this, by providing that the parties may agree to allow the referee a greater compensation, in which case the rate agreed to may be taxed. Without affirming or adopting this latter practice as controlling the court in the exercise of the discretion given by rule 88 in equity, above referred to, I am of opinion that such special cases ought to be made exceptions to the general rule on the subject.

[NOTE. For another case involving this patent. see note to Doughty v. West, Case No. 4,029.]

In the present case, the counsel for both parties agree, and it is shown by affidavit, that peculiar and unusual labor and difficulty was thrown upon the master, and that even the adjournments involved a great loss of time, which might have been and would have been devoted to other business actually pending before him. I, therefore—while, as the general rule, I approve the rates prescribed for referees under the state law, and do not design to make this special case a precedent for others—deem it just and reasonable to fix the compensation to be allowed to the master, for hearings at which testimony was taken, argument heard, or other actual service in the case rendered, at ten dollars per day, and for attending when the reference was adjourned without any service rendered, at five dollars per day. An order to this effect may be entered, and the costs will be adjusted according, to the foregoing opinion, upon both the points submitted.