124 Misc. 102 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1924
The petitioner herein seeks a judicial settlement of its intermediate accounts. This proceeding was commenced by the filing of a petition and the issuance of an order to show cause based thereon, directed to the parties in interest, requiring them to show cause why such accounts should not be judicially settled. The petition was accompanied by a verified account presented and filed therewith. The application would be entertained and the relief sought would be granted as a matter of course, were it not for an opinion which has been called to my attention, Matter of Empire Trust Co. (123 Misc. 673), wherein an application to settle the accounts of a trustee upon the termination of an express trust was presented to the court by petition. The appointment of the trustee in that case was made pursuant to section 20 of the Personal Property Law, and the application was denied upon the ground that the relief asked for was that which would be obtained in an action for judicial settlement of the account; that as there is no statutory authority for such a special proceeding in this court, there is no requirement that the court should exercise its inherent power, if any, to entertain the application when instituted by petition in a special proceeding. The court there concluded that the provisions of the Civil Practice Act relating to the bringing and the conducting of actions govern the judicial settlement of a trustee’s account in this court, and that the entertainment of a motion for such relief by a special proceeding is irregular and would be an unnecessary and an unauthorized usurpation of authority. There is, perhaps, this distinction to be observed between that case and the case at bar: In the case cited the application was made upon the termination of the trust. Here the application is sought during the continuance of the trust and as an incident to its administration. In the case at bar it appears that some time prior to
The stipulation pursuant to which the judgment was entered, contained, among other things, the following provision: “ It is expressly understood and agreed that the court may and shall enter judgment according to the stipulations of this agreement and shall make and enter any further order from time to time for the better carrying out of the plans and purposes of this settlement * *
It is unnecessary to set forth in detail the provisions of the stipulations and judgment, for the question here involved is whether or not this court has jurisdiction of the subject-matter and of the parties, and whether such jurisdiction should be exercised. The petitioner herein is the trustee of an express trust of property, all of which has been converted into personalty pursuant to the terms of said stipulations and judgment. Unquestionably this court has jurisdiction of the subject-matter. Having jurisdiction of the subject-matter, has the court acquired jurisdiction of the parties by this special proceeding? Special proceedings in many different forms have been instituted and carried through the courts without express statutory authority therefor, and without disapproval by the appellate courts. As has been stated, this proceeding has beep conunenced by the filing of a petition and the
In Matter of Holden (supra) a proceeding was instituted by the trustee of a trust for leave to resign and to procure the appointment of a new trustee. The Court of Appeals held it to be a special proceeding, and it appears that in said proceeding the petitioner presented its accounts for judicial settlement. No question was raised as to the jurisdiction of the court either over the parties or the subject-matter involved.
In Matter of Runk (200 N Y. 447) appears a very excellent discussion of the general jurisdiction exercised formerly by the Court of Chancery and by Surrogates’ Courts over accountings of trustees. In the opinion by Werner, J., it is said: “By degrees it was discovered that the general jurisdiction exercised by the Court of Chancery furnished a much more effective and expeditious remedy than was to be found in the Prerogative Court, and accounts in the Court of Chancery increased until the common-law courts were but rarely resorted to. But this practice of accounting in equity overreached itself and in time demonstrated the necessity of establishing local tribunals with an independent jurisdiction in matters relating to the succession of estates.” The court further said: “ The Real Property Law and the Personal Property Law (§§ 111 and 20) confer no new jurisdiction upon the Supreme Court, and the sections of the Code of Civil Procedure (§§ 2802-2820) take nothing from it. The Supreme Court, as the successor of the Court of Chancery, has always had, and still has, jurisdiction over all classes of trusts. The question is not whether that jurisdiction exists, but whether it is exclusive. Unquestionably it is exclusive in so far as it involves the exercise of equitable powers or duties
While in the sentence last quoted it is stated that where the accounting was sought in the Supreme Court the procedure was in the form of an action, such an accounting appears to have been had (Matter of Simpson, supra) before the Supreme Court in a proceeding instituted by petition and order, wherein it was sought to obtain the appointment of a trustee to execute the trust created by a will and to settle the accounts of the deceased trustee. The proceeding was allowed without question and on appeal it was denominated as a special proceeding. So also in Matter of Holden (supra).
If, in a proceeding brought to permit a trustee to resign and to procure the appointment of a new trustee, as was done in Matter of Holden (supra), an accounting may be had as an incident to the proceeding, I see no valid reason why an accounting may not be had herein as an incident to the administration of the trusts. The proceeding is analogous to the proceeding for the judicial settlement of accounts of trustees in Surrogates’ Courts, and to the procedure for settlement of the accounts of a committee of an incompetent under section 1381 of the Civil Practice Act. It is more summary than an action, is less cumbersome, and permits the granting of
The proceeding will, therefore, be entertained, and upon an examination and adjustment of the accounts an order may be entered adjusting and settling the same.