245 A.D. 841 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1935
On appeal by the trustee from a final judgment stating his account, surcharging him with various items and amounts and removing him from that office, final judgment modified in the following respects: As to charges, by striking out the sum of $2,932.18 as interest on the cash balance; the sum of $4,156.29 as interest on principal and interest received from mortgages, and the sum of $2,621.69 as interest on distributions, and by reducing the item of $14,332 to the sum of $11,832 and by adding as charges the sums of $66.66 from interest paid by Dobkin; $445.28 from interest paid by 2090 Broadway Corporation; $283.33 from dividends on Eire Insurance stock; $121.49 from interest on balance of Guaranty account; $216.66 from repayment of Bonta loan; $331.25 from interest on mortgage on East One Hundred and Sixty-sixth street; $961.87 from repayment of loans over expenditures for same from Deal and Ulster Corporations and auctioneer’s fees, and $4,452.54 to offset the difference between the stated value of securities purchased with $19,500 of trust moneys, the charges being in the aggregate the sum of $174,-941.46 exclusive of interest as hereinafter set forth. As to credits, the following additional items are allowed: $29,400 as payments to respondents; $3,333.33 represented by a one-third interest in the Fire Insurance stock; $233.33 representing a one-third interest in remainder of loan to 2090 Broadway Corporation; $1,666.66, one-third interest in the remaining Dobkin loan; $288.14, one-third interest in Guaranty account balance, and $2,974.25, one-third share of operating expenses, interest, taxes and fees of $500, $3,251.95, $1,093.40, $3,873.53 and $203.87. These credits total $162,339.25. The surcharge will then be the sum of $12,602.21, with interest which shall accrue at the rate of three per cent on the $2,000 payment to the husband alleged to have been “ salary ” and considered under the distribution charge, and also on all other added charges, with the exception of the offset to the value of the securities held, from the time payments were received by the husband or went into the Guaranty account, to be computed by the parties. As so modified, the final judgment is unanimously affirmed, with costs to respondents. We are of opinion that even though the payments of $600 monthly were made out of the corpus and the funds depleted pro tanto, in the absence of a showing of bad faith on the part of the trustee, the trustee is exculpated under the agreement despite the tenor of that instrument under which payments were to be made from income alone. Moreover, the construction of the agreement, contained in the interlocutory judgment, prepared at the instance of the respondents, seems to have settled the issues by adjudicating that payments were to be made “ out of the income or principal of the trust funds in his [trustee’s] hands under said agreement, so long as