138 N.Y.S. 620 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1912
This proceeding was instituted to obtain a judicial settlement of the accounts of Louis B. Hasbrouck, executor of the last will and testament of Benjamin F. Curtis, deceased. Among the assets accounted for were 974 shares of stock of the Publishers’ Plate Company. As to them the will provided: “ Third: I give and bequeath unto my brother-in-law, Frank Baum, any and all shares of the capital stock of the Publishers’ Plate Company, which I may have at the time of my decease, upon condition, however, that he pay during the life of my wife, Annie, for her support and maintenance, any and all dividends received thereon up to 4 per cent per annum. Any dividends in excess thereof to belong to him. ” In his account the executor says that he has not delivered said stock to Baum, in view of the lien claimed against the stock, and pending certain actions referred to in said account affecting the Publishers’ Plate Company. The lien claimed to which reference is made is one asserted by the firm of Sporborg & Canter, attorneys at law, under an agreement with Baum by which they undertook to prosecute an appeal from the decree of the surrogate of Queens county which had admitted to probate the said will. of Benjamin F. Curtis, in an incomplete form and with a portion of paragraph 3 stricken therefrom. It also contained these words: “ This is to evidence that I have employed Messrs. William D. Sporborg and Josiah Canter * * * to take all further proceedings as may be necessary, to the end that there may be paid to me [Baum] the legacy bequeathed to me under and by virtue of the said will; and in the event that my right to obtain such legacy shall be established I do hereby agree to pay to the aforesaid firm of Sporborg & Canter the sum equivalent to forty (40%) per cent of the amount I shall receive subject to the provisions of said will without personal liability for said fees.” The appeal was taken, and was successful (Matter of Curtis, 135 App. Div. 745), and the will was afterwards admitted to probate as originally made. Sporborg & Canter appeared in the accounting proceedings, and thereafter filed a petition entitled therein, and also entitled,’ “In the Matter of Benjamin F. Curtis, deceased,” praying that it be determined, first, that the petitioners have a lien
The Surrogate’s Court has exceeded its jurisdiction. But if the only persons interested in the ownership of the stock were Baum and Sporborg & Canter, and the decree had been entered in a proper proceeding, we think that the surrogate’s decision is erroneous. The.agreement, taken as a whole, is not only that Baum’s right to obtain the legacy shall be established, but that there shall be paid to him the legacy bequeathed under and by virtue of said will. This agreement was not fully performed until both the right and the result of the right were obtained.
Beyond that, we think that the surrogate erred in the conclusion which he reached as to the. subject-matter of respondents’ lien. The subject-matter of an attorney’s lien, measured by the statute, is the “ judgment or final order * * and the proceeds thereof in whosoever (sic) hands they may come.” The Ghent’s original cause of action or claim is now merged in the judgment in the probate proceedings. This judgment is to the effect that Benjamin E: Curtis had executed a valid will under which appellant was to receive said stock, first, upon the trust hereinbefore referred to, and then for his .own benefit. But this judgment of itself may have little or no value except as a means to an end, and the respondents do not claim a lien on this judgment. So we turn to the-other provisions of the statute contained in the words “and the proceeds thereof.” What are the proceeds of the judgment ?' So far it has yielded the appellant nothing. But if it should be asserted that respondents’ claim is to be measured by the terms of the agreement father than by the provisions of the statute, we think that there is no substantial difference between them. In the case of the statute it is “ the proceeds of the judgment,” and in the agreement it is “ the amount Í shall receive subject to the provisions of said will.” If, however, the agreement created any different or larger lien from that created by the statute, then the Surrogate’s Court has no equitable powers, either to determine the amount of or enforce such a lien. Because of the peculiar form of the bequest, because Baum’s title to the stock is not an absolute one, because the stock is the stock in a close corporation,' upon which no'dividends have been declared, and its market valué cannot be determined by any actual sales thereof previously made, it may be difficult for the respondents to obtain a judicial determination, either under the statute or under the provisions of the agreement, of the amount and extent of their lien, and obtain an enforcement thereof. It may be in an
Jenks, P. J., and Rich, J., concurred; Hirschberg and Woodward, JJ., concurred in result.
So much of the decree of the Surrogate’s Court of Queens county as is appealed from reversed, with costs, and proceedings remitted to the Surrogate’s Court to make such further decree upon the accounting as may be necessary under the opinion herein.