18 N.Y.S. 830 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1892
The appellants claim that the surrogate’s court of Jefferson county possesses jurisdiction and power to determine all the questions arising in this action, and that no sufficient reason is shown for bringing an equity action in the supreme court. It is not alleged in the ans wer that the plaintiffs have an
On the 23d June, 1883, the plaintiff presented to the surrogate’s court a petition for the probate of the will. Objections to the probate were thereafter filed on behalf of the son, and a contest was had in the surrogate’s court. Pending this, and on the 3d September, 1883, John D. Ellis was appointed temporary administrator of the estate of Harriet Chase, deceased, and on the 21st June, 1884, a committee was appointed by the supreme court of the person and estate of the son. On the 28th November, 1884, a decree was made by the surrogate refusing probate to both said will and codicil; and in connection with this the surrogate passed upon and allowed the plaintiff the full bill of costs and disbursements provided by statute, being the sum of $904.72, of which $420 were costs, and $484.72 were disbursements, and the same were accepted by the plaintiff. Thereafter the plaintiff appealed to the general term, and in July, 1886, a decision was rendered (41 Hun, 203) reversing the decree, and directing a new trial before a jury. A new trial was had, which resulted in a verdict sustaining the will, and rejecting the codicil. In pursuance of this verdict, and on the 3d February, 1887, a decree was entered in the surrogate’s court admitting the will to probate, and granting letters testamentary to plaintiff, who thereupon qualified and entered upon the discharge of his duties. In this decree there was adjudged to the plaintiff, for costs and disbursements accruing and incurred by plaintiff, as proponent of said will and codicil, subsequent to the prior decree, the sum of $1,435.70, of which $285 were costs and $1,150.70 were disbursements. These sums were
It was found by the special term, upon sufficient evidence, that the defendant Yost, administrator, etc., and some of the paternal heirs of James Chase,. Jr., claimed that the settlement and adjustment of the indebtedness of Harriet Chase with said Waddingham was illegal and void, for want of notice of the same to the paternal heirs, and that such settlement would not be acquiesced in, nor binding upon them. It was also found that upon the trial it was-claimed by some of the maternal heirs of James Chase, Jr., that the provisions of the will authorizing the renting of the real estate by the executor were-void, and that the rents received by him were real estate, and should be paid to the maternal heirs, to the exclusion of the administrators of the estate of James Chase, Je., and his paternal heirs; and that it was the duty of Waddingham, upon his appointment as committee, to have taken possession of the-real estate of the testatrix, and received the rents and profits down to the time of the death of said James; that it was claimed by the administrators of James-Chase, Jr., that the rents and profits received by plaintiff were personal estate, and that they were entitled to receive the same as such; that Waddingham claimed he had no right to take possession of such real estate, or receive the-rents and profits. The appellant’s counsel claims that there is no proof to sustain these findings. Ho exception is taken to them. The answers of the defendants, the maternal heirs, and of Waddingham are not printed in the appeal book. The complaint is broad enough to cover all these questions. It is quite apparent from the pleadings that are printed, and from the requests of the appellants, that a question was made as to the validity or extent of the power of the plaintiff over the real estate. There was also apparently a question whether the surviving annuitant had directly a lien on the real estate, or indirectly alien, through the exercise by the plaintiff of the election given him, in the first clause of the will, whereby the debts there referred to would be payable from the real estate, thereby increasing the amount of the personal estate applicable to the payment of the annuity.
It further appears that the plaintiff, in the litigation concerning the probate of the will, employed counsel, whose services were reasonably worth several thousand dollars over and above the sums awarded as costs in the decrees, of the surrogate’s court. It is found upon sufficient evidence that such em
The maternal heirs of James Chase, Jr., the committee, Waddingham, and the attorneys who claim- counsel fees, were all parties defendant in the action, and seem to have answered in the case. Hone of those parties, however, are made parties upon this appeal. The main question raised by the appellants here upon the merits relates to the counsel fees, and we may as well come directly to that subject. In doing so, we assume that the appellants can raise the question whether the plaintiff has a right to be reimbursed for the expenses of counsel, although such counsel have not been brought in upon this appeal. If the plaintiff deemed it important that they should be parties here, it was probably his duty to have moved for an order requiring the appellants to bring them in, and in that way perfect their appeal. This was the practice followed by this court in Hubbell v. Iron Works, decided by this court in April, 1890, and affirmed by the court of appeals in 121 N. Y. 716, 24 N. E. Rep. 1101. The special term, after finding the amounts due the respective counsel as the fair and reasonable value of their services, and that the employment of such counsel by the executor was necessary and in good faith, and for the benefit and protection of the estate, decided, as matter of law, that it was the duty of plaintiff to pay the respective counsel the sums found, as a part of the expenses of administration, and to charge the same against the estate. An accounting was directed before a referee, in which the executor would be credited with payments so made. It is suggested by the appellants that the court had no right to pass upon the propriety of such payments before they were actually made by the executor. The appellants had full opportunity to be heard, both as to the right and the amount, and it is difficult to see how the rights of the appellants have been injured or impaired by the determination of the question before actual payment. The judgment does not provide for any credit to the executor for such charges before actual payment, and in that respect is not within the rule laid down in Re Bailey, 47 Hun, 477, and kindred cases. As said by Finch, J., in an analogous case, (In re Attorney General v. Insurance Co., 91 N. Y. 61,) they are none the less the necessary expenses of his trust because fixed in advance of actual payment. In Gilman v. Gilman, 6 Thomp. & C. 211, affirmed in 63 N. Y. 41, counsel fees seemed to have been allowed before payment.
We then come to the question whether the plaintiff is entitled to be indemnified from the estate for expenses necessarily and in good faith incurred in obtaining the probate of the will. The claim of the appellants is that the plaintiff cap obtain for such expenses nothing beyond the costs awarded to him in the decrees of the surrogate’s court made in Hovember, 1884, upon refusing probate of the will, and in February, 1887, upon admitting the will to-probate. The costs allowed in those decrees were those permitted by sec-
It has been held by the court of appeals that the supreme court has power to make allowances to trustees, and others acting in a fiduciary capacity, for ■all expenses necessarily incurred in the faithful performance of their duties, including counsel fees, and'that the power to do this is independent of the statutory provisions relating to costs. Wetmore v. Parker, 52 N. Y. 466, referring to Downing v. Marshall, 37 N. Y. 380. This is applicable to executors, and the existence of the principle seems to be conceded in Re Holden, 126 N. Y. 593, 27 N. E. Rep. 1063. See, also, Woodruff v. Railroad Co., (N. Y. App.) 29 N. E. Rep. 251. There is nothing in the provisions of the Code as to the costs in probate cases that interferes with this, principle. There is no good reason presented for inferring an intent to so interfere. Did not such a rule exist, there would be many cases where the wills of testators, as well as their estates, could not be fairly protected without great personal loss to the executors. A testator, in naming an executor, gives him an implied authority and direction to do all he reasonably can to prove and' carry out the will, and this carries with it the right to charge the estate with the reasonable expense. We see no good reason in the present case why the plaintiff should not be indemnified. It is not necessary here to consider the effect of the provisions of section 2562 of the Code, as that does not refer to counsel fees in a case like the present. But it is said that the surrogate’s court in its decrees as to costs adjudicated that the costs then allowed were all that "the plaintiff was entitled to receive for expenses of counsel in those proceedings. There was no adjudication in terms to that effect, nor is that-the fair inference from those decrees. The taxable costs were allowed. The question of what the plaintiff had incurred for counsel fees or should be allowed was not then before the court. The parties were not there .who had a right to be heard on the question. In Unglish v. Marvin, 128 N. Y. 380, 28 N. E. Rep. 634, it is said that a party relying upon a former adjudication as a bar must show that the point involved was decided in the former suit. We fail to find here, any former adjudication that affects the question. Ho other questions are presented that call for particular consideration. Ho fault is found with the form of the. decree. It follows that the judgment should be affirmed. Judgnient affirmed, with costs. All concur.