52 N.Y.S. 741 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
The plaintiff is the daughter and one of the beneficiaries under the will of the late Austin Corbin ; and the defendants who have answered and who are the respondents in this action, are the executors of that will. The other defendants, who make no appearance in the action, are also next of kin and legatees of Mr.,Corbin, but they are made defendants solely because they refused to join with the plaintiff in the prosecution of the action. When the case came on for trial it was opened at length by the counsel for the plaintiff, and upon the opening and the allegations of the complaint a motion ivas made by the defendants’ counsel for judgment upon the ground that the court had no jurisdiction of the matters set up in the complaint, but that such jurisdiction wras vested by statute wholly in the Surrogate’s Court of the proper county. It was further claimed by the counsel for the defendants that, if the court did have jurisdiction because of the matters alleged in the complaint to give to the plaintiff any relief in this action, yet the Surrogate’s Court had precisely the same jurisdiction, and that this court would not exercise its jurisdiction in matters as to which complete power was given to the court of the surrogate to grant the plaintiff all the relief to which she was entitled. The court below dismissed the complaint upon this motion, and from the judgment entered upon that dismissal this appeal is taken.
The plaintiff alleges that she is one of the legatees and beneficiaries under the last will and testament of Austin Corbin; that the defendant Austin Corbin, Jr., was a son of Austin Corbin, and that Hannah M. Corbin is his widow; that they are both legatees under the will, and that they, with the defendant Edgell, are the executors named in the will, and have qualified as such. The defendants Isabella Edgell and Austin Andre Champollion are legatees, and are joined as defendants, as has been said, because they refused to unite with the plaintiff in the prosecution of the suit.
The allegations of the complaint, stated shortly, are to the effect that the defendants Austin Corbin, Jr., and Hannah M. Corbin are under the influence of the defendant Edgell, and, by reason of their age and inexperience and the state of health of Mrs. Corbin, are not competent persons to take charge of the administration of a great estate like that of which Austin Corbin died possessed. It is alleged
The relief demanded is that they be removed as executors; that a receiver be appointed to administer the estate; that the debts of the estate and the legacies under the will may be paid ; that the executors be required to account for the assets of the estate which they have received or with due diligence might have received, and also for all income and dividends, issues and profits thereof; that they may be charged personally with all losses sustained by the estate in consequence of their incompetence, negligence or other misconduct, and for all payments of money improperly made by them ; that the will and codicil of the testator may be construed ; that the defendants Edgell and Austin Corbin, Jr., may be required to account for the value of certain assets which it is alleged they have improperly disposed of; that those two executors may be required to account for all salaries received by them as officers of corporations controlled by or through the stock thereof belonging to the estate; that they may be also required to account to the plaintiff for the securities retained and withheld from her, and that they may be charged with and required to pay to her the depreciation in value of the securities so retained; that the trust fund to the amount of $150,000 directed
The answers of the three defendants who are executors are substantially alike. While they protest that many of the allegations in the complaint charging them with waste and malfeasance in their office as trustees are not true, they do not deny them in any other way, and, therefore, it is doubtful if they put them in issue in such a way that the plaintiff would be put to her proof. But this is not material, because the motion for judgment having been made upon the opening, it must be determined upon the theory that the plaintiff would have proved all the allegations in the complaint and all the other statements in the opening which are fairly within the purview of these allegations (Scott v. The Mayor, 27 App. Div. 240); and the appeal must be determined as though all those facts had been established by the evidence. The only questions, therefore, presented in the case are those which were presented to the court below, whether this court, by reason of the allegations contained in the complaint, had jurisdiction to control the executors in their management of the estate, and to give such directions or order such a judgment as would prevent further waste and preserve the estate and carry out the directions contained in the will; and if this court has such jurisdiction, whether, under all the circumstances of the case, it is proper to exercise it in this action, within rules of law which have been settled and are binding upon the court.
In view of the condition of the precedents, it will hardly be disputed at this day, that whenever it is made to appear to a court of equity that an executor has mismanaged or put in jeopardy the assets of the estate or is guilty of negligence or improper conduct by which the assets are likely to be wasted or impaired, that court has jurisdiction to require him to account and to give such judgment in regard to the matter as will protect the estate and restrain the executor from the illegal acts which he purposes to do or has done. (Jenkins v. Jenkins, 1 Paige, 243; Elmendorf v. Lansing, 4 Johns. Ch. 562; Wood v. Brown, 34 N. Y. 337; 1 Story Eq. Juris. § 534 et seq.) This jurisdiction having been possessed by the Court of
The cases are not entirely in unison as to what constitutes such special circumstances. The apparent lack of harmony between them arises, however, because of the peculiar condition of the statute giving jurisdiction to Surrogates’ Courts at the different times when the various decisions were made. For a long time the jurisdiction of that court was especially prescribed by the statute, and it was particularly enjoined from exercising any incidental jurisdiction. While that was the condition of the law, it is apparent that many cases were likely to be presented to the Surrogate’s Court in which it was not able to give complete and perfect relief such as the circumstances demanded, for the reason that it had no power to go beyond the strict letter of the statute in the exercise of its authority and mould its decree to the necessities of the case by the exercise of incidental powers. That prohibition upon the exercise of its powers, however, was found to be so inconvenient that it was finally removed, and the court now has by express provision of statute the authority to exercise such incidental powers as are necessary to carry
It appears in this case that a proceeding has been taken by the executors in the Surrogate’s Court of the county of’Suffolk, where the will was proved and which has jurisdiction of the matter, to obtain a judicial settlement of the estate. In that proceeding a citation has been issued, which was served upon the plaintiff, and issues have been joined by the tiling of the accounts of the executors and objections on the part of the plaintiff, and the matter is now in hearing before a referee appointed for that purpose. The fact that such a proceeding has been begun is of itself of no importance except so far as it shows that the rights of the plaintiff are not in danger of being lost because they are not now in process of adjudication, for the court to which resort has been had has jurisdiction to determine all those rights. So that the question finally presented upon this appeal is whether, if resort were had to the proper surrogate, all the matters alleged in this complaint as a ground for relief could be determined, and substantially the same relief granted as is asked for in the complaint if the plaintiff should show that she was entitled to it.
The jurisdiction of the Surrogate’s Court is given by statute, which is cohtained in section 2472 of the Code of Civil Procedure. By that section authority is given to the surrogate to revoke letters testamentary and to appoint a successor in the place of a person whose letters have been revoked, to direct and control the conduct and settle the accounts of executors, to enforce the payment of debts and legacies, the distribution of the estates of decedents and the payment or delivery by executors of money or other property in their possession belonging to the estate, and to administer justice in all matters relating to the affairs of decedents according to the provisions of the statutes relating thereto (Code Civ. Proc. § 2472), and as has been said, in addition to this, the court has authority to exercise such incidental powers as are necessary to carry into effect the powers expressly conferred. Authority is also given to the Surrogate’s Court to enjoin an executor, to whom a citation or process has been duly issued, from acting as such until the further order of the court (Code Civ. Proc. § 2481, subd. 4), and under that section it has been determined that the court, in exercising that
The complaint in this action attacks the executors only in their quality as such. It does not call upon the court to construe any portion of the will except so far as such a construction is necessary to determine the propriety of the conduct of the executors in the distribution of assets and to prescribe their acts in that regard. So far as can be gathered from the complaint or from the opening of counsel, there was no disposition made of real estate in the will. As a matter of fact the will did dispose of real estate; but no question arising upon that portion of the will is presented in this action, and no possible question is presented which is not before the surrogate in the proceeding for a judicial settlement and which he is not-necessarily called upon to determine before a decree can be made in that proceeding. All the parties who are interested in that proceeding are before the surrogate. The jurisdiction of the subject-matter is fully given to him by the statute. There is no suggestion that he cannot make an effective decree as to every matter as to which this court is called upon to determine. It is said that this action brings in question the acts of the executors as trustees of the fund of §150,000 which is to be set apart for the plaintiff’s benefit by them. But that fund is, as appears, not yet set apart from the body of the estate, and the complaint is that the executors refused to set it apart and to establish the fund which they are to hold as trustees. It is clearly within the jurisdiction of the surrogate, as a result of the accounting, in the performance of his duty, to enforce the payment of legacies and the distribution of the estate, to direct the executors and determine how much is necessary to be set apart to bring up the fund to the full amount of $150,000, and to direct them to set it apart; and when that shall have been done it will be
For these reasons it seems to us that it is proper that the determination of this matter should be left with the Surrogate’s Court, where the statute has put it, rather than that it should be drawn into this court, whose jurisdiction to do certain of the things which are demanded by this complaint is, to say the least, doubtful.
The judgment of the Special Term is, therefore, affirmed, with costs to the respondents.
Van Brunt, P. J., O’Brien and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs to respondents.