As to the receivers’ compensation: One of the receivers, for reasons not binding on his coreceiver, asked for and was allowed much less than the maximum fee. No question arises as to his compensation. The other receiver asked for and was allowed by the referee the maximum statutory compensation, $803.90. The trustee objects thereto, contending that the case was not one warranting such an amount. There was a hearing before the referee, and the evidence is reported.
[1] The receivers were in office 27 days, during which time they carried on the business. They hired a manager and left the actual control of ’the business almost entirely to him. They settled the general policy to be followed, kept a general oversight of things, carried the responsibility, signed about 160 checks, and attended to such incidental matters as would naturally arise. They were not required to be much away from their own offices on the business of the receivership, and it took no large proportion of their time. It does not appear that the services of the receiver whose compensation is objected to were specially valuable; he seems to have taken no leading part, perhaps no part, in the constructive work of reorganizing the company. The property was appraised for about $40,000; and there passed through the receivers’ hands while they were carrying on the business about $66,000.
The compensation specified in the statute is clearly intended not as a fixed, invariable amount to be awarded in all cases, but as a maximum to be allowed only in cases justifying it. As a practical matter, in the great majority of cases the maximum compensation is so small that it is not even fair compensation for the work done; but in each case the question, nevertheless, is how much the services of the receivers were fairly worth.
[2, 3] Considerable latitude is allowed to the judicial officer under whose immediate direction and control the work was done. The question before me is not what I think I myself would have allowed, but what is the utmost which the referee could properly have allowed in the facts shown. See Trustees, etc., v. Greenough, 105 U. S. 527, 537, 26 L. Ed. 1157; Weiss v. Haight & Freese Co., 165 Fed. 432, 91 C. C. A. 382 (C. C. A. 1st Cir.); In re Cash-Papworth, 210 Fed. *81524, 126 C. C. A. 604. By the settled practice in this district, the total compensation to receivers is not to be increased by the fact that there is more than one receiver. See section 48b, relating to trustees.
[4] In this case it seems to me that the learned referee, in fixing the compensation which is objected to, gave too much weight to the amount of property involved and too little weight to the amount and value of the services rendered. The record before me clearly shows, in my opinion, that' $1,607.80 was more than the services of the receivers were fairly worth, and that in allowing one-half that sum to the receiver, who insisted on it, the learned referee was in error. The allowance objected to is reduced to $600 and actual expenses.